Filtrar por género

CMA Connect

CMA Connect

Canadian Marketing Association

Welcome to CMA Connect - the voice of the Canadian marketing community. Join us for empowering discussions with industry leaders about the rapidly changing world of marketing.

63 - EP31 - Storytelling for Success with Kayla Grey
0:00 / 0:00
1x
  • 63 - EP31 - Storytelling for Success with Kayla Grey

    In this episode of CMA Connect, the CEO of the CMA, Alison Simpson, welcomes Kayla Grey, sideline reporter for the Toronto Raptors, and host and co-executive producer of "The Shift with Kayla Grey" on TSN. Kayla will also host the 2024 CMA Awards Gala. Alison and Kayla discuss Kayla's career journey, the strategies that helped her build her brand, and how influential storytelling is in an industry lacking diversity.

    00:00:00:00 - 00:00:23:16 Presenter Welcome to CMA Connect, Canada's marketing podcast, where industry experts discuss how marketers must manage the tectonic shifts that will change how brands and businesses are built for tomorrow, while also delivering on today's business needs. With your host, CMA CEO Alison Simpson.

    00:00:23:18 - 00:00:49:03 Alison In today's episode, I'm thrilled to be joined by a very special guest. Kayla Grey is a trailblazing figure in the world of sports media. As the host and co-executive producer of The Shift with Kayla Grey on TSN, she's been at the forefront of driving important conversations at the intersection of sports and culture. Kayla is also a sideline reporter for the Toronto Raptors, bringing fans closer to the action and the many stories behind the game.

    00:00:49:05 - 00:01:10:18 Alison I'm excited to share that Kayla is also hosting this year's CMA Awards Gala on November 22nd. It's going to be a terrific evening celebrating the amazing creativity and impactful work of Canada's marketing profession and all that we've accomplished over the last year. As someone who embraces and has benefited from creativity is important role in building both brands and business,

    00:01:10:23 - 00:01:37:17 Alison Kayla will be a wonderful host. In today's episode, we're diving into Kayla's remarkable career journey, exploring some of the lessons she's learned along the way and her strategies behind building a powerful personal brand. We'll also discuss the critical role of creativity in marketing and storytelling, and explores Kayla's thoughts on the future of the sports and entertainment industry. Welcome, Kayla, I am absolutely thrilled to have you here today and looking forward to a great conversation.

    00:01:37:19 - 00:01:39:13 Kayla Thanks so much for having me. 

    00:01:39:13 - 00:01:46:10 Alison Now, I would love to start by having you share a bit about your career journey so far, particularly your experience launching The Shift on TSN.

    00:01:46:13 - 00:02:12:19 Kayla So I came to TSN as a radio producer. And sort of that was my intro into the sports world on a broadcasting space. So producing radio, Raptors game nights, Leaf game nights, and then really just working my way into getting in front of the camera, I noticed that there was not really anybody talking about the Raptors at that time, or the opponents that were coming in.

    00:02:12:19 - 00:02:30:03 Kayla So I kind of pitched myself to our digital team and said, hey, like, if you're a fan of the Raptors, I truly believe you're a fan of the NBA. Let me talk about it for free 99. And they did. And so that's how I was able to kind of build my rapport that way until I was auditioning for Sportscentre.

    00:02:30:05 - 00:02:54:05 Kayla I made my debut of course, and became the first black woman to host a sports highlight show in Canada. And so that was great for me to kind of really get my reps in that way, but then also get my intros in that way, too, with the national audience. I continued with my coverage of the Raptors and really, really knew that there was something I did want to also contribute to the network, which was a show.

    00:02:54:07 - 00:03:15:22 Kayla Roll around, 2020 comes around. We're talking about a lack of diversity within the space and one of my biggest things that I've championed all the entire time I was there was the lack of diversity in storytelling, particularly with marginalized communities, but also with women as well. And so, you know, I was thinking and mulling and I was just like, what do I want to watch?

    00:03:16:04 - 00:03:40:20 Kayla What does that perfect show look like for me? What are the topics? What are the conversations? What are the things aesthetically that I want to see? And I literally was jotting down every single idea on a napkin. And I brought it to our brand partnership team, who brought it, of course, to a sponsor. They came in and boom, we launched The Shift and we're, I think four seasons, and now still rolling strong.

    00:03:40:22 - 00:04:01:07 Kayla And yeah, I think like the first of its kind in this country in terms of it being a digital-based platform on a national network. And so I'm just so proud of the work that we've done. But I'm also proud that, you know, I was able to see a missing hole in the market fill it and it to be successful.

    00:04:01:09 - 00:04:24:23 Alison Huge congratulations. In your intro, you've shared two remarkable firsts, and I absolutely love the fact that you took charge. You saw an opportunity. You set a goal for yourself and you didn't wait for someone else to create the opportunity. You defined it, you pitched it and you were successful. So huge kudos to you. And it's easy to understand why you are as successful as you are.

    00:04:24:23 - 00:04:27:10 Alison And I can only imagine what the future will bring.

    00:04:27:12 - 00:04:28:23 Kayla Thank you.

    00:04:29:00 - 00:04:51:01 Alison So part of that is building a strong personal brand. And that's certainly critical for success today in the marketing profession, in the sports and entertainment profession. And I would say in professions in every single industry. So I would love you to share how you've approached brand building when it comes to your own brand. And what advice do you have for others based on your success and learnings along the way?

    00:04:51:03 - 00:05:15:04 Kayla Yeah, I think I've been very open about when I first came in because I was only at that time wanting to morph and mold myself into something that was way more malleable for an audience that wasn't used to seeing someone like me on their screen. And that backfired completely. It just totally took me out of my flow, how I usually talked, my spunk, my charisma.

    00:05:15:06 - 00:05:52:08 Kayla And I just remember there just being a turning point for me when my grandma called me and was like, you're not even sounding like yourself. Like, who am I watching on the screen? And me having to strip that all away because that was my protection at the time and just go into work bare. Not saying like bare naked, but I mean bare as in, like who I truly was, owning my culture, owning, you know, that I say things a certain way, that I debate topics a certain way, and understanding that in order for me to show up as the best version of myself, I had to come as myself, which took a lot of vulnerability.

    00:05:52:10 - 00:06:11:19 Kayla But it was to me something I think that helped to heighten me and my career. And also my platform was, people were getting someone that they felt were authentic. And, you know, to me, I was okay with people not liking who I was. And I was okay with people loving who I was. And you get a bit of both when you're, of course, in front of the camera.

    00:06:12:00 - 00:06:34:19 Kayla But it was a non-negotiable for me early on to change who I was or how I did things, the things that I cared about and the causes that I spoke up on. And I think when you think about branding, one of the things that makes you resonate with an audience is being very clear about who you are and your humanity, your ethos, what you believe in.

    00:06:35:01 - 00:06:56:23 Kayla And I think that that is the general theme and tie, because I can tell you, there's so many people that I've connected with on social media or at the arena or just, you know, out. And I don't think we would have conversations other than, you know, the fact that they say, recognize me or whatnot. Like, I just don't think that we would be in the same rooms as because of our upbringings, or lived experiences.

    00:06:57:01 - 00:07:21:07 Kayla But what I will say is it shocked me is no, but we have something to talk about because we share values. We share a love of sport. There's so many common threads that I think that people miss between themselves and other people that are so easy to tap into. So, you know, when I was thinking about what my brand looked like, I think the first thing that I said was, it has to be real.

    00:07:21:09 - 00:07:45:22 Kayla It has to feel good. It has to have integrity. And there was a very quick understanding that if all of those things were there, they would naturally come. An audience would come, my people would come, I would feel seen. And I think I've moved through different brand partnership deals, through different causes, initiatives that I've tried to take up, with the same kind of bar.

    00:07:46:00 - 00:07:49:18 Kayla And I think that's allowed me to sleep good at night.

    00:07:49:20 - 00:08:10:21 Alison That is such incredibly valuable learning. And the irony is you identified a missed opportunity. You identified the fact that there weren't diverse voices and pitched the network successfully on bringing a diverse voice. And then when you're in the seat, you try to conform. And I've been the first female a couple of times in my career.

    00:08:10:21 - 00:08:11:11 Kayla Right.

    00:08:11:12 - 00:08:28:00 Alison I fell victim to exactly the same thing. You get your seat at the table and then you try to conform instead of realizing this is going to be so much more powerful by not conforming and by stretching the perceptions and the expectations of the people around the table and ultimately the audiences you're trying to engage, so...

    00:08:28:00 - 00:08:52:03 Kayla Yeah, and to be clear, like for yourself, I'm sure you know this. It's not easy. That is not easy work. That is actually the hardest route available to you. But the rewards are just so amazing. And then I think you also know this, that table that we fight so hard to sit at is actually not even made for us to be sitting there at all, nor to be successful at.

    00:08:52:05 - 00:09:14:20 Kayla And so I think it's like out of necessity that we understand that, like we have to build new tables, we have to build new rooms, and that takes innovation, that takes awareness of self, that takes courage. And I think in order to succeed in any industry, courage has to be one of the things that you lean all the way into.

    00:09:15:01 - 00:09:35:00 Alison And especially in this day and age, and you're a very public figure. People's BS meter, it has never been higher. So yeah, not being true to who we really are, people are going to legitimately call BS on us. They're going to disengage. We're not going to be credible. And when you embrace who you are, it has such an incredible impact.

    00:09:35:00 - 00:09:37:10 Alison I also love the fact that your grandmother called you on it.

    00:09:37:12 - 00:09:59:09 Kayla Yeah, my my grandmother was like, absolutely not. We're not representing the family this way. And it wasn't that I was doing a bad job. I think she just, she just knows me so well and she I think she also just knows, like, I cannot let you have 20 years in this industry doing this. And then at the end when you look back at your career being like, man, like I who was I, I was like a shell of myself.

    00:09:59:11 - 00:10:23:19 Kayla And, you know, I'm very blessed that I, you know, it's it's a blessing and a curse. I came into the industry like, very young, like I was 19 when I first started interning with the Argos, 24 when I made my debut on Sportscentre. And 31 now. So, you know, as much as I was introduced to an audience, I was a completely different person back then.

    00:10:23:19 - 00:10:48:21 Kayla I didn't have my son back then. Like I grew with an audience. And, you know, when you're someone that is growing and aging and maturing on a personal standpoint, that also takes form professionally, too. And so I had to get really comfortable with like, hey, I'm okay to change my mind on things. I'm okay to stand a little bit differently in my 30s than I did in my 20s.

    00:10:48:21 - 00:11:01:05 Kayla And, you know, I think it's kind of this beautiful relationship that I've built with audience that they've kind of, in many ways seen me grow up and grow through phases. And that's been really special as well.

    00:11:01:06 - 00:11:12:17 Alison Yeah. That's amazing. Well, you're also, your audience is growing with you and a huge benefit you're bringing to TSN is that younger audience and those voices that they haven't represented before.

    00:11:12:19 - 00:11:30:07 Kayla Yeah. And I think that that was something that I really took on knowing that I might appeal to a different audience, but then also having the wherewithal and mindset, because at the end of the day, like it is a business, that this is going to be the audience that is going to be in the driver's seat when it comes to spending.

    00:11:30:09 - 00:11:57:07 Kayla I know how I spend, I know how the economy affects my age group or me. And so, you know, when I come to the table of ideation for The Shift, I can drive those conversations with my lived experiences, and what I'm seeing, what I care about. And I think, you know, because TSN was started so long ago and had a different group of audiences, those values and things are a lot different.

    00:11:57:09 - 00:12:20:12 Kayla I'm not saying that they don't matter. They still do matter. And, you know, when we think about a lot of the spending that still comes from that group. But I think as we're thinking about ways to integrate the new audience or the next generation, it is important to have that healthy balance. And so I add value that way of kind of being in the know, of like, okay, this is where we are going, this is the direction where we're going.

    00:12:20:14 - 00:12:48:08 Kayla But I still take a lot from the older generation because there was just a level of integrity involved in the journalism. And that's what I grew up on was, you know, the, the strength of journalism, proper question asking. And I'll be honest, I think that that's kind of what's missing right now, with this influx of information. And so, you know, I think that every generation leaves behind a beautiful blueprint.

    00:12:48:10 - 00:12:58:20 Kayla And we're doing the industry a misservice to not go back and reference, said blueprint. I'm not saying copy it, but to learn from it and to innovate that way.

    00:12:58:22 - 00:13:10:19 Alison So looking forward, building on that, looking forward. How do you see the future of sports and entertainment evolving, especially from a storytelling and an audience engagement perspective? And then I want to hear what excites you most.

    00:13:10:21 - 00:13:33:05 Kayla Yeah, and that's a great way to ask it, is what excites me, because I think in this world where there's so much change, the first thing that comes up is what scares us. And I think, you know, as you know, with budgets and all of the things, that fear stops us from trying new things or leaning into new directions in ways, and that's not going to be helpful.

    00:13:33:10 - 00:13:55:20 Kayla I think what excites me is all these different platforms that are coming in and new ways of accessibility. That was the biggest thing for me coming up is, I was not able to see myself on camera and I had to, like, illegally stream ESPN feeds just to see like black women in that space and that boils down to accessibility.

    00:13:56:01 - 00:14:20:22 Kayla So imagine now a younger audience, varying in gender, varying and sex, varying in beliefs, now has this like level of accessibility to seeing their stories being told. I think that that's what's exciting is now you can kind of reach people everywhere. I think where we're going is we're having that, but then now we're also seeing these streaming companies coming in.

    00:14:21:03 - 00:14:52:16 Kayla Right? And that is something to be mindful of. But when we kind of really dissect from like an entertainment landscape of, okay, well, when we think about like the Netflixes of the world, the Amazons of the world, it's this vast library of content, but there's actually no meter of like what's deemed successful. You might be watching Gilmore Girls, I might be watching The Wire and those numbers can't compete with each other because they're completely different.

    00:14:52:18 - 00:15:23:17 Kayla And so I think that that's the challenge, is figuring out the new bar of what is successful, what is that return of investment when we're talking about ideating and creating all of this content? And I think that's something the entire industry is shifting and trying to figure out right now is, is it truly quality over quantity, or are we going to revert back to the quantity model from in the past, where, you know, you had your TV, 28 channels, you got what you got.

    00:15:23:17 - 00:15:50:02 Kayla Right? And so I think that we're in that kind of question mark, of where we're leaning. But again, I think what excites me is now we get to answer that for ourselves. And now audiences get to answer that for ourselves. I've never seen an era in which an audience can sway a network to hire people, fire people, change content, switch up how content is being shown.

    00:15:50:04 - 00:16:04:19 Kayla It truly is this equal transaction and exchange between property and audience and I think in some ways that's going to help build a more collaborative front when it comes to the stories that we're telling.

    00:16:04:21 - 00:16:17:14 Alison Great insights, and you're absolutely right that we have so many choices today and we're all really, really busy. So you do get overwhelmed by too much choice and you do want a curated option.

    00:16:17:14 - 00:16:17:22 Kayla Yes.

    00:16:17:22 - 00:16:24:03 Alison Where we go to like friends and family and apps to, to shorten the list.

    00:16:24:05 - 00:16:42:06 Kayla You know, and they barely do. There's certain apps you go and it says top ten picks for you. And then it's because you watched this, another top ten picks. And because your mom watched this, here's ten picks. And it's just like, I think people just want something a little bit more custom.

    00:16:42:08 - 00:16:44:12 Alison Like, yeah, it's definitely a work in progress.

    00:16:44:12 - 00:16:45:14 Kayla Yes.

    00:16:45:16 - 00:16:56:12 Alison So I'm going to switch gears a little bit. We are so looking forward to having you host the upcoming CMA Awards, and I would love to hear, what are you looking forward to about hosting and what do you hope to take away from the experience?

    00:16:56:14 - 00:17:27:21 Kayla I think to me, storytelling is my purpose. Sharing stories, inviting vulnerability in people so they can find the confidence in that space as well is like my passion. And, you know, I think when people think about marketing and that realm, selling is the first thing that comes to mind. And to me it's seeing. Seeing is the first thing that comes to mind when it comes to marketing is, it's this like extension of saying to audience, I see you and this is for you.

    00:17:27:23 - 00:18:02:11 Kayla And so to me, I'm really, really excited to be in a room full of people that can activate that feeling of being seen and just also see the unique ways of their storytelling, the unique ways of which they've been able to reach people, to allow people to feel in short and long segments. I think that we don't give people enough credit, when it comes to being able to touch people and different mediums and means, and so to just sort of be in that space, I'm really looking forward to it.

    00:18:02:13 - 00:18:14:02 Alison I've had the pleasure of judging some of the awards. We've had more award entries this year than ever before, and ticket sales are on fire. So...

    00:18:14:02 - 00:18:19:18 Kayla I love that. I love that! Like, you know what? People really want to be amongst each other these days.

    00:18:19:20 - 00:18:39:17 Alison Absolutely. And you're going to be wowed by the caliber of the creativity, the diversity of thought and ways that the Canadian marketing profession has really delivered on very different business needs in a way that is so incredibly compelling for the Canadians they're trying to attract and actually have grown the business too. So it's going to be a very fun evening.

    00:18:39:17 - 00:18:40:12 Alison I'm looking forward to sharing it with you.

    00:18:40:13 - 00:18:41:13 Kayla Yeah.

    00:18:41:15 - 00:18:52:17 Alison Now, the awards very much recognize the critical role of creativity in marketing and business. How do you view the importance of creativity in your work, and where do you see it having the biggest impact today?

    00:18:52:19 - 00:19:11:00 Kayla Yeah, I think you always have to be innovating. You always have to go back to the mind of your six year old. And I think so much of us, when we grow up, we almost like negate that. But I think about my six year old son and, you know, I give him something to think about or he has Lego to play with.

    00:19:11:00 - 00:19:39:14 Kayla And we're both big Lego buffs. So I build by the instructions. Levi, my son, builds by his imagination. And I'm constantly learning from him when it comes to that, because you need a couple of things. You need space to do so. You need resources, of course, but you also need nobody telling you no, or nobody handing you the instruction manual.

    00:19:39:16 - 00:20:07:05 Kayla And I think I always go back to that when I'm ideating and when I'm thinking things and when I'm going through, what do I want to see? And what I'm realizing in this process is I'm not dreaming big enough. I'm not creating wildly enough because I have this mental instruction manual in my brain. And, you know, when I think about the most successful campaigns and most successful shows, those are people that were thinking well outside of the box.

    00:20:07:05 - 00:20:34:16 Kayla Right. And and so when I think about creativity in business, you know, as much as I'm also getting caught up to that because I was more in the creative space, and numbers were never my thing, I also realized how much the two go hand in hand. And so, you know, when I think about business and success and what made The Shift sell and what's still bringing in attention, it's the risk taking.

    00:20:34:18 - 00:20:50:18 Kayla And, you know, the reward at the end is what sustains us. But, you know, obviously you have to be mindful and work within your means. But I think that you're doing the project and the passion a disservice if you're not allowing yourself to kind of run wild sometimes.

    00:20:50:20 - 00:20:54:10 Alison That is such great learning. I love that you're learning from Levi as well, because your...

    00:20:54:12 - 00:21:14:19 Kayla Your kids are going to be your biggest teachers. As much as we as parents think that we're going to be teaching them, there's so many,  I, you know, I remember as a woman coming into the industry and being pregnant and thinking my, my career is over. Like, woman, pregnant in sports, about to have a kid, like it is done for me.

    00:21:14:21 - 00:21:30:11 Kayla And when I made my debut, I was eight and a half months pregnant. And I'll tell you, I don't think I would be as successful as I am today without my kid. Like, it just teaches you so much, you know?

    00:21:30:13 - 00:21:32:17 Alison Yeah, they get you to see the world differently.

    00:21:32:18 - 00:21:35:19 Kayla Different. Yeah, absolutely.

    00:21:35:20 - 00:21:36:21 Alison And

    00:21:36:21 - 00:21:51:22 Kayla It doesn't have to be kids. It could be your dog. It could be your goldfish. It could be, you know, a loved one. I just think, for me, it was having that extra body in my life, that really allowed me to take just everything to the next level within my career.

    00:21:51:23 - 00:21:59:08 Alison So to wrap up our discussion, I would love to have you share one piece of advice for our listeners on how they can grow their career. 

    00:21:59:10 - 00:22:21:14 Kayla Ooohhh. That's good. I think, so many of us get so caught up in the busy, so caught up in the busy, and so there's a two part. One, live Your life. And I'm not saying that because, you know, I think, I think you should go out and have fun. I absolutely do. But life gives you context.

    00:22:21:16 - 00:22:48:21 Kayla And so when you're at the tables and ideas are coming, you have lived enough life to understand what actually makes sense, what actually feels good, what do you actually like? Life gives you the greatest context, I think, for any decision that you make within this space. The second piece of advice is get back to your why. And if you don't have your why, take time to define it and don't define it

    00:22:48:21 - 00:23:20:07 Kayla so specifically. I would say that again, my purpose, my why, is to invite people to get vulnerable so they can then be confident, and that confidence is then going to invite other people to step into that vulnerability. I guess broadly I can say storyteller, but storytelling for me appears in so many different ways. So when you figure out your why in a broad term, it gives you permission to play and it gives you permission to apply that

    00:23:20:07 - 00:23:53:09 Kayla why in so many different spaces. I think what's what's so beautiful about life is it doesn't have to be this one straight path. The job doesn't have to be the job for the next 30 years. It can take many iterations and it can take many different versions. So I think in terms of career, really getting clear about the why, and the purpose can really help be the best compass for you, for next steps, for advancing, for, you know, switching things up, for transitioning.

    00:23:53:09 - 00:23:59:03 Kayla I think getting very clear about that, can be incredibly helpful.

    00:23:59:05 - 00:24:04:17 Alison I love your why. It is incredibly inspiring. And will take you so many places in your career.

    00:24:04:19 - 00:24:06:20 Kayla Thank you, I appreciate that.

    00:24:06:22 - 00:24:15:08 Alison Kayla, I am very much looking forward to sharing the stage with you. Thanks for such a fun conversation and looking forward to continuing it in person.

    00:24:15:10 - 00:24:26:08 Kayla Thank you so much for having me, and I cannot wait for these awards. I'm so, so, so excited!

    00:24:26:10 - 00:24:38:23 Presenter Thanks for joining us. Be sure to visit the CMA.ca and sign up for your free My CMA account. It's a great way to stay connected and benefit from the latest marketing, thought leadership news and industry trends.

     

    Tue, 12 Nov 2024 - 24min
  • 62 - EP30 - Redefining Brand Value with Peter Rodriguez and Bruce Symbalisty

    Is the brand still relevant? In this episode of CMA Connect, the CEO of the CMA, Alison Simpson, sits down with two of the CMA's Brand Council members. Peter Rodriguez is the Founder and CMO of Brand Igniter Inc., and Bruce Symbalisty is the Chief Solutions Strategist at Reality Engine. Tune in for insights from Bruce, Peter and Alison as they discuss what a brand is, how it creates value, its relevance in today's marketplace, and how to effectively measure how it drives business results.

    [00:00:00] Narrator: Welcome to CMA Connect, Canada's marketing podcast, where industry experts discuss how marketers must manage the tectonic shifts that will change how brands and businesses are built for tomorrow, while also delivering on today's business needs. With your host, CMA's CEO, Alison Simpson.

    [00:00:22] Alison Simpson: In today's episode, we will explore brand's critical role in driving business success. As the marketplace continues to evolve at an incredibly rapid pace, it's even more important than ever for marketers and for business leaders to truly understand the value of a strong brand. Joining me today are two industry experts and members of our CMA's brand council.

    [00:00:43] Alison Simpson: They bring unique perspectives on the power of branding, and this is promising to be a great conversation. Peter Rodriguez is the founder and CMO of Brand Igniter Inc. And Bruce Symbalisty is a chief solutions strategist at Reality Engine. Peter and Bruce will share their insights on how brands create value and also contribute to long term business growth.

    [00:01:02] Alison Simpson: Throughout our discussion today, we're going to tackle a whole host of questions and issues, starting with the question of brand relevance. In the light of the tsunami of change that's impacting our profession, how relevant are brands today? We're also going to discuss how marketers can effectively measure the impact of their brand building efforts.

    [00:01:21] Alison Simpson: Peter and Bruce will share their thoughts on the critical role of marketers in ensuring that brands are seen as mission critical to business success. And how they can help bridge the knowledge gap among executives by speaking the language of business. There's certainly some debate in the global marketing profession today, questioning whether brands are still relevant in today's marketplace.

    [00:01:41] Alison Simpson: So we'll tackle that in our discussion as well. It's clear that we have a lot to cover and two brand leaders with diverse opinions, which is sure to make for a great conversation. So welcome today, Peter

    [00:01:50] Peter Rodriguez: and Bruce. Thank you very much. It's a pleasure to be here. It is also a pleasure to be here.

    [00:01:56] Alison Simpson: I want to kick things off brand, depending on your [00:02:00] background and your point of view can have surprisingly many, many different definitions.

    [00:02:05] Alison Simpson: So I'd love to have you each start by sharing how you define brand. How does a strong brand create value for a business? Peter, why don't you kick things off?

    [00:02:14] Peter Rodriguez: Of course. Thank you very much. And brands are incredibly valuable. And in my opinion, there are three pillars that define a brand. One, it's a promise.

    [00:02:23] Peter Rodriguez: Two, it's a shortcut. And three, it's an asset. It's a promise of consistent delivery, no matter what. Every time that you interact with the brand, it's a shortcut to understand value. Instead of having to repeat the attributes or benefits of a product, the brand does the shortcut so that we understand it, that we can create value.

    [00:02:46] Peter Rodriguez: And the last piece is probably the most important. It's an asset. It's an asset, not only because it can be seen on our. Statements, but because it creates value. It is the one thing that enables an organization to [00:03:00] create higher margins by virtue of offering a higher price point versus others. And that is an engine for financial performance.

    [00:03:10] Peter Rodriguez: So in the definition that best works for me. Those three pillars have become crucial in order to understand what the importance of this is for the economy, for companies, for us marketers. And the better we understand how to use this as an asset, we can create that value that our organizations pay us to create.

    [00:03:35] Peter Rodriguez: It is more than just the Concept about promotion. It is the asset that enables us to succeed as an organization.

    [00:03:44] Alison Simpson: That's a great definition, Peter. And Bruce, how would you define brand?

    [00:03:48] Bruce Symbalisty: Well, when we look at brand and it's actual, the word itself, Origins. It comes from the Norse, actually, and it means to burn.

    [00:03:59] Bruce Symbalisty: So then when [00:04:00] we look at kind of historically, what was it used for? I mean, we know that ranchers and cowboys branded cattle to identify it. And this is what's very important is when people saw that brand, they would know what that cattle livestock who it belonged to. And Also, when you saw that brand, you also knew whether that was a good person or bad person.

    [00:04:25] Bruce Symbalisty: So this is why a brand actually does the heavy lifting of an organization because the brand in and of itself makes a business memorable. It helps encourage customers to buy from you and it supports marketing and advertising. And it has a lot of extension through organizations to all its stakeholders.

    [00:04:47] Bruce Symbalisty: Holders internally and externally.

    [00:04:50] Alison Simpson: So I would love for you each to share an example of a brand that is known for really driving business impact.

    [00:04:59] Peter Rodriguez: [00:05:00] Well, I love to kick in with one example that continues to amaze me every time I talk about it. And, um, it's Apple. I continue to give them my money. Not because it's a better product, not because it's the better phone, but because the brand has captured what I want.

    [00:05:18] Peter Rodriguez: They understand exactly what I want and not what I need. And I think that this is a very important distinction. We try so hard to get people to buy the things that we think they need. When in reality, people buy and pay a premium for the things that they want. And usually those wants Are the source of this economic value that brands create the value that you perceive from Apple.

    [00:05:44] Peter Rodriguez: That's what you pay for. And I'd like to make this the key example. It's perceived value that separates brands. It's not product value. And one of the things that I'd like to share as part of the value that I perceive from Apple is the [00:06:00] simplification of technology. I am not a techie guy. I don't know much about it, but I know that if I have Apple on my side, They will take care of me.

    [00:06:08] Peter Rodriguez: I will call a human. We'll always answer. They will stay with me until I fix my problem. And that value is priceless. Will I throw in 2, 000 for a new phone? Yeah. Next time I will. And with a smile, I will be very happy to drop that money because of the value I perceive from them. Might not be the value of the product, but the perceived value is crucial.

    [00:06:29] Peter Rodriguez: So that to me is one of the many examples that I think that I, as a marketer can learn from, it's not the product. Okay. It never is. It's about the perceived value that we get from the brands.

    [00:06:41] Alison Simpson: That's a great example. And the fact that they can command such a premium and we're willing to pay it with a smile speaks volumes.

    [00:06:47] Alison Simpson: So Bruce, what would you add to that?

    [00:06:49] Bruce Symbalisty: Apple has invested a lot into their brand. Apple created the unboxing experience through brand and people created anticipation and love [00:07:00] for it. And so that's what I think is very exciting about how they, they have made changes by springboarding off of what their brand means.

    [00:07:10] Bruce Symbalisty: But, you know, if, when we look at other consumer brands, like I'll say Fenty cosmetics, they changed the world of cosmetics by introducing 40 shades of foundation in beauty for all. And in making, making it an inclusive product line, but interestingly enough, almost every other brand in the world now has followed suit and expanded their brands because of it, because it recognizes the consumer demand and value in individuality and a personal connection to their brand.

    [00:07:44] Alison Simpson: Those are both such powerful examples and examples of literally billion, in one case, trillion dollar businesses that brands have helped build. So with those sorts of success stories, it's a bit surprising for me that in today's rapidly evolving [00:08:00] marketplace, it's being questioned, are brands still relevant?

    [00:08:03] Alison Simpson: So two part question, why do you think the relevance of brands is being questioned today? And then let's answer the question, are brands today still relevant?

    [00:08:12] Bruce Symbalisty: We live in a world where the time to tell stories now is shorter, attention spans are shorter, and so the marketplace has become very quick to make judgments because the access to information through social media channels, internet and websites, people can collect, choose and determine whether they trust you.

    [00:08:35] Bruce Symbalisty: And so from a branding perspective, a brand needs to be strong, but people are questioning it because of the speed of the market is moving so quickly. Does a brand have time to take hold? Well, this is why it's even more important than ever to invest in brand. For that long term, long tail approach to an organization and a company.

    [00:08:59] Bruce Symbalisty: And [00:09:00] so that's why I think it is relevant, but it's being questioned because organizations want short term results. They want, uh, they have to answer their quarterly stakeholder reports and those kinds of things. And they just don't perceive it as a deep value item. And this is coming as a generalism.

    [00:09:19] Peter Rodriguez: I would add that one of the biggest challenges that we encounter is that, uh, in order to be relevant, we need to talk about what people care about.

    [00:09:29] Peter Rodriguez: CEOs and CFOs care about the business results, care about the balance sheet and the cashflow and the profit and loss statement. Our brands are the engine. Any brand, not only our brands, any brand is the engine that generates that. And it's not the top line sales only. That's where I think that we have missed the boat.

    [00:09:51] Peter Rodriguez: The conversation is not about creating volume at the top line. The biggest impact that marketing does is in creating that gross [00:10:00] margin. Gross margin is really when, when we start talking. And every time I have the opportunity to speak with CFOs or CEOs, the moment we start talking about margins, then the conversation becomes strategic.

    [00:10:12] Peter Rodriguez: It becomes, help me. Increase my margins. How can I make them accretive? If we bring forward recommendations as marketers that can do that, then we get the center of attention. As in many organizations, that's still the case, so I don't think we're gonna, we're losing relevance and maybe brands are losing relevance because they're spoken outside of that correlation, causation.

    [00:10:37] Peter Rodriguez: Between brand value in the minds of consumers, willingness to pay, and gross margins, which is what business leaders care about.

    [00:10:47] Bruce Symbalisty: There are branding leaders, and then there's a, I'm going to call it a mushy middle, where there's a lot of. Branding that is occurring, either me to branding or, uh, [00:11:00] uh, where it is not as advanced as a brand that has been invested in.

    [00:11:05] Bruce Symbalisty: And I think that that mushy middle has a lot of competition, a lot of confusion, and, uh, there, there's no leadership in that space.

    [00:11:16] Alison Simpson: And there's such opportunity in the mushy middle for someone to actually. apply good business and brand principles and really differentiate themselves. Now, Peter, you've spent a lot of your career in top tier global brands, a lot of time with the C suite, and also living by the rule of quarterly results are paramount.

    [00:11:36] Alison Simpson: So, you've got some great experience, and I'd love you to share how can marketers effectively measure the impact of Of brands on driving business results and what are the metrics that they should really be focused on?

    [00:11:49] Peter Rodriguez: That's a great question. I, um, to your point, that was one of the biggest debates that we always have in the C suite and my, what I've learned is [00:12:00] that the conversation.

    [00:12:02] Peter Rodriguez: Gets better when we start defining who is responsible for what, and I think that there is a big need to identify that the short term, the operating plan is mostly in the hands of sales for delivery, and it's not necessarily in the hands of marketing. It is, there is some level of that. Of impact. But the way that I have seen it happen in the companies where I've worked is that we need to create the environment so that the short term can happen.

    [00:12:36] Peter Rodriguez: So marketing creates the strategies that will help create this value that we can convert every year into profit in the measurement of ROI. Has shifted from measuring the overall marketing mix, which includes product development, research and development, pricing, and all of the mix that we control down to just the ROI on [00:13:00] campaigns.

    [00:13:00] Peter Rodriguez: And that should be in the tactical Area of the conversation. So I saw that and I still see today that when the conversation can be more clearly articulated in terms of, is this an operating thing that we're talking about for the quarter and we need to lap next year's quarter and make sure that we deliver growth.

    [00:13:21] Peter Rodriguez: That's a whole different conversation. Then do we create the environment so that next quarter, like, A year from now in two years from now, we have the assets that allow us to deliver those results. That is the realm of strategic marketing. And when we start talking about those things. In collaboration with sales, then it becomes a much more measurable thing.

    [00:13:47] Peter Rodriguez: So there are things that we are measuring that are not relevant. So for example, measuring only campaigns is limited, but for example, we're not measuring top of mind, share of mind, which is a [00:14:00] precursor of market share. Market share is one of the things that allows us to have longterm success. Those things.

    [00:14:06] Peter Rodriguez: Are in the realm of marketing, those things are usually not talked about as the metrics in the short term. For example, repurchase rates. How are we predisposing people versus last year to prefer this brand at a higher price? That is an indicator of success next quarter and next year's quarters and the change in customer lifetime value.

    [00:14:30] Peter Rodriguez: That is rarely talked about because those changes actually tell us if our marketing initiatives from product distribution, pricing, et cetera, are working. So, net net, I think that that conversation about incrementality. It's usually now outside of marketing. We don't get invited as many times. We are just like, well, here's your budget and make it happen.

    [00:14:55] Peter Rodriguez: And what I see, unfortunately, is that now when we [00:15:00] call performance marketing, marketing, it's not really marketing. It is sales with a Facebook account or with an internet access, because they're working on the short term. They have to deliver now, which is great. We provide the foundation so that people want to pay more.

    [00:15:18] Peter Rodriguez: Today, because we built that two years ago. And I think that that's a part that would benefit the conversations in the collaboration between sales and marketing. I clearly can see that in the operating plan and then marketing being primarily driving the strategic plan.

    [00:15:35] Alison Simpson: Now, Bruce, you and your role from an agency perspective have worked across very diverse brands, very diverse industries.

    [00:15:42] Alison Simpson: So I'd love you to share your thoughts on. What are the ways to effectively measure the impact of brands on driving business results?

    [00:15:50] Bruce Symbalisty: Within the, the brand space, there's many metrics to be able to kind of look at how well a brand is doing over time, both [00:16:00] short term and long term. But the flip side of this particular coin is then moving into things like all the organizational financial metrics, of course, and that profit margins and, and revenue growth and those kinds of things.

    [00:16:15] Bruce Symbalisty: And then aligning things that are customer acquisition costs. People often don't think about what happens. Let's say you're selling a very sophisticated product and it takes a year to encourage somebody to sell. If you were able to shorten that timeline to six months, that has a huge impact on an organization and brings customers in faster.

    [00:16:39] Bruce Symbalisty: And if a brand supports that. To the sales team, that's a powerful metric. So there's many others as well, but these kinds of metrics, I think, support the case for a brand working with other departments in an organization.

    [00:16:55] Alison Simpson: Now, Peter, earlier in our conversation, you shared your, part of your definition [00:17:00] of brand was it's a shortcut.

    [00:17:01] Alison Simpson: I would build on that and say a brand is also. Protects you against reputational risk. And certainly we've got examples from years ago with Tylenol, a Canadian example with make believe where there was a significant business issue that many companies never would have recovered from, but the power of their brand was a key.

    [00:17:22] Alison Simpson: Asset in their ability to recover. So do you want to share a little bit about that?

    [00:17:27] Peter Rodriguez: You mentioned Tylenol and that is very close to my heart. That's one of the brands that I've had the privilege of running. And I had the opportunity to learn the Credo, the Credo from J& J. Started to be even more relevant because of that horrible situation that they had to face in the eighties when someone tampered with the product and there was human impact to the worst of the worst kind.

    [00:17:55] Peter Rodriguez: But the one thing that I took away from learning the [00:18:00] creator is that what did the CEO do when things go bad and there is a need to leverage the brand value. To save a company. He went on live TV at that time. There was no social media. He immediately said, we're recalling everything. And then we're going to take action to make sure that you are safe.

    [00:18:20] Peter Rodriguez: So he took care of the brand first. He said, Tylenol is going to be out for a while. I don't know for how long, because we're recalling everything, but we will come back and we, your trust is the most important thing. And within a lightning speed period, they came back and they relaunched the brand and they recovered all of the market share and they became the top brand again.

    [00:18:44] Peter Rodriguez: And it was not the product. At the end of the day, the product, um, had to, you know, some safety measures had to be. Updated, but the value of the brand rested also on how people reacted. And that taught me [00:19:00] something. It is not what we sell. It's not what we say. It's how we say it. It's how we do it. And it's how the brand does things.

    [00:19:07] Peter Rodriguez: They said, this is how we're going to make it stand for you. This is how we're going to fix this. And this is how you're going to love it again. So I think that that level of. Commitment in understanding the value of branding from the highest levels of our organizations. Is something that will help not only our profession, we in Canada are facing a crisis of productivity.

    [00:19:34] Peter Rodriguez: Why? Because we are not creating enough value. In my opinion, by creating this value with brands is how we start reversing that. This is how we start creating something people want to pay more for. Not only in Canada, but we can do that with the globe.

    [00:19:50] Alison Simpson: Now the three of us have built our careers on.

    [00:19:55] Alison Simpson: Understanding and leveraging the critical role that marketing has in driving [00:20:00] business success. And we all fundamentally believe in the very important role brands have in delivering on that. Many, many of our listeners, if not all of our listeners will feel exactly the same way. Yet when you open it up to the broader business community, that is not as obvious or evident.

    [00:20:17] Alison Simpson: So Bruce, I'd love you to kick off the answer to this question. As marketers, what do we need to do to ensure that brands are seen as mission critical to business success?

    [00:20:27] Bruce Symbalisty: I know that brand in and of itself is misunderstood within organizations. And so having Education and having a concerted effort within an organization and with internal stakeholders is paramount to really kind of ingrain the understanding of how brand Integrates within an organization and has a lot of touch points, everything from [00:21:00] the strategic planning within an organization with strategies and innovation and how it communicates to the organization's Culture, which helps kind of build that team relationship of working together for that result of value driven results within an organization, but it goes beyond that, Allison, you know, product innovation, the consumer experience, the moment of purchase.

    [00:21:30] Bruce Symbalisty: And then ultimately business results is when brand is working with all of them. And what I, what I would suggest is, you know, even just a listening ear to have this ear of branding to what work is being done with an organization can actually be very powerful to generate ideas and move things forward.

    [00:21:56] Alison Simpson: Well, very well said. Now, Peter, I know. You and I connect on the [00:22:00] importance of speaking the language of business. So I would love you to add your thoughts too.

    [00:22:04] Peter Rodriguez: Of course. Yeah. You know, one of the things that I will build on the point before, uh, of literacy in the C suite, knowing our audience is crucial, our audience is not speaking the language that we speak internally as marketers.

    [00:22:21] Peter Rodriguez: Therefore, if we speak this dialect of marketing, if I, If I may use that word and don't translate it into the common business language. We don't have to go crazy about the numbers in order to explain what we say, but we have to be very clear in using one very simple tool. The biggest tool that I have used as a marketer in order to persuade the decisions on investment in marketing is a Proforma P& L.

    [00:22:52] Peter Rodriguez: A Proforma P& L is the simplest, most powerful slice. That will get [00:23:00] the attention from the C suite. My suggestion is that we marketers could use only five lines. Top line, cost of goods, gross margin, marketing, investment, and EBITDA. In other words, before interest, taxes, and depreciation. If we can show those two, one without my idea.

    [00:23:19] Peter Rodriguez: One with my idea side by side, there is no way that people will not stop and listen in the C suite. So when I say speaking the language of business, I don't mean we have to speak cash flow all the time. No, it is just one of the biggest advocates for one of the biggest relaunches I had the opportunity to do in our market was a CFO.

    [00:23:42] Peter Rodriguez: And he wanted me in his office because I only spoke about by making these changes, by doing this, we're going to get people to buy more for more money, more frequently on a higher margin. This is [00:24:00] how your P& L is going to look like. Don't do it. And we're going to end up this way. That simple, and it was one page and it was the page that I was using all the time for that.

    [00:24:11] Peter Rodriguez: And that was a major shifting strategy because it would shift this brand from a cash cow into an investor and obviously they listen because we were talking only the business, the language of business. We're not talking, make this brand bigger, make this brand more relevant. No, we were talking about, this is what's going to happen with everything that we're doing at language of business in action, I believe is something that would benefit all of us.

    [00:24:36] Peter Rodriguez: Because it's irresistible. Actually, it is the most charming piece of communication. We can have is a proforma PNL

    [00:24:44] Alison Simpson: that is such a powerful example, and it also reinforces as marketers. One of the core skills we have in areas of expertise is our ability to analyze the situation, analyze it. And audience and understand how to be [00:25:00] relevant and compelling to them.

    [00:25:01] Alison Simpson: So we do such a good job of that in our external efforts, but we don't always take the time or make it a priority to really do that with our internal stakeholders and truly understand what will be compelling to them and speak in a language that a CEO can understand. So Bruce, I'd love to turn it over to you.

    [00:25:20] Alison Simpson: We've talked a little bit about performance marketing. The reality in a good economy and even more so in a challenging economy is that delivering short term business results is mission critical as well as ensuring that the business is well positioned for long term growth. So how can marketers balance that pressure for short term results and quarterly performance along with the need for long term brand building?

    [00:25:47] Bruce Symbalisty: The ability to design a preferred future and model where you want to go strategically Is part of that overall or overarching [00:26:00] strategy, the marketplace is going to determine and look at the brand of itself and choose whether to authenticate it. And trust. We have to remember, although we're selling business to business or business to consumer, we're still selling to humans and humans are emotional.

    [00:26:20] Bruce Symbalisty: Humans make choices. Like Peter said, though, there are the humans that look at analytics and data and make choices based on that, but when I look at it from an internal perspective, it is about education. And when Peter's talking about literacy, he's talking also about education, and I really do believe that.

    [00:26:43] Bruce Symbalisty: Uh, as marketers and as branders, networking internally within your company with other departments and people and let them understand the value that you drive within an [00:27:00] organization as a brander and as a marketer, and I know that those are soft skills, not necessarily analytical skills, but what they do is they start to build consensus.

    [00:27:12] Bruce Symbalisty: And within an organization, the greatest thing you can do is have everybody rowing in the right and same direction. And that's consensus. And then that's how, that's how I look at it.

    [00:27:24] Alison Simpson: Great perspective. And I would also add to that the power of any short term tactical marketing, any performance marketing will always be stronger when it's leveraging a strong, powerful brand and a deep relationship with the consumers that it's trying to attract.

    [00:27:40] Alison Simpson: Peter, I'd love your thoughts on this as well.

    [00:27:42] Peter Rodriguez: When there is bad marketing, when there is lazy marketing, there is no way that we can deliver the short term. Then that's when we start delivering it. You know how? Price, and that's the worst place where if you want to be now, I think that when we do have a [00:28:00] strong, the opposite that I said before, when we do have a foundation of a strong brand value plan, and we can prove as marketers that we have persuaded people to be predisposed to paying what the value of the brand is, then sales has a much easier order.

    [00:28:19] Peter Rodriguez: Thank you. Not easier, but better way to do things. The biggest challenges that I have encountered in my career in this company is when I come to a place where they say, well, we're having a hard time and we cannot reach the quota for the quarter and we don't, we don't, we don't have promotions. We only have loyalty programs that we can push is it?

    [00:28:41] Peter Rodriguez: Well, what are we saying? When we have nothing to say about the brand, that is the worst thing, because that should have started two years ago, three years ago, building that value so that we can capitalize on that. But you know, that strategy is, cannot be made in one quarter, not even in one year. Sometimes it has to be proven, tested, [00:29:00] developed, changed, updated.

    [00:29:02] Peter Rodriguez: By the time we go to the reset, the shelf reset, then sales is so powerful. That they get what they need. And we sell a lot more and we sell at a higher level and we sell at a higher price point. What we do with pricing and validate the pricing structure takes time. Distribution or availability of services or products or whatever is it that we're selling takes time.

    [00:29:29] Peter Rodriguez: But when it's done well, then sales can go and execute the quarterly gains in the targets don't become so hard to achieve if we have that foundation.

    [00:29:40] Bruce Symbalisty: Going off of what Peter was talking about is generating value in the short term, you know, immediate sales and driving traffic through campaigns. Those kinds of things are going to continue to remain, but what we're seeing is a transition to a long term relationships.

    [00:29:59] Bruce Symbalisty: And [00:30:00] a very current example is Jameson Vitamin Supplements. Is actually now investing into their brand by taking investors behind the scenes on how they manufacture their product with high quality ingredients, because they are actually seeing that the marketplace is requiring that and demanding that.

    [00:30:24] Bruce Symbalisty: And I believe like what Peter said, they're looking into the future. Several years. They're setting the table for that because that's what a leader does.

    [00:30:35] Alison Simpson: Thank you both. That's very valuable insights were shared through that and Peter building on your comment around the drug of discounting. It's obviously not good from a margin perspective.

    [00:30:45] Alison Simpson: The other risk following that strategy is you're teaching your consumers that if they want your product, just wait another week or another month, because it's bound to go on sale. And that's really hard to recover. I knew the time would fly by with the 2 of you. And that has definitely been the case today.

    [00:30:59] Alison Simpson: So before I [00:31:00] let you go on with your busy days, I would love to close off today's discussion by having you each share a piece of advice that you would provide for our listeners. Bruce, why don't you kick us off?

    [00:31:10] Bruce Symbalisty: I believe that the greatest thing to do is to give it away. So give away your knowledge, share your knowledge, mentor people within your organization on branding.

    [00:31:24] Bruce Symbalisty: I believe that this will be highly influential. And building a strong culture around what it means to belong to a brand, to a company, and that will have a halo effect that will affect everyone and be very powerful and influential. I believe. The greatest skill is to work together and to collaborate to create new spaces for creating value.

    [00:31:55] Bruce Symbalisty: And that's how companies of the future will succeed. That's how [00:32:00] marketers will succeed is through collaboration and working together and lifting each other up. And I think that that is, that is my advice.

    [00:32:12] Alison Simpson: That is great advice. Thanks, Bruce.

    [00:32:15] Peter Rodriguez: One of the biggest piece of advice that I would give is go and spend time with your consumer.

    [00:32:20] Peter Rodriguez: Don't try to know them through research. I mean, research is good and I will always support it. But just go out and do shop alongs. If you sell stuff for, Breakfast, go have breakfast with them and just watch them spend time in. If you are in consumer packaged goods, just spend time in off rails, in food basics, in Metro, in Costco, and just watch people.

    [00:32:42] Peter Rodriguez: I do, I still do that. I just go there and I'm just watching people. So I find it fascinating how. They make decisions. And the last thing, be passionate about marketing, love marketing,

    [00:32:53] Bruce Symbalisty: breathe marketing, eat marketing, but, but don't freak, don't forget to sleep. [00:33:00] Okay. Dream marketing. Yeah.

    [00:33:04] Alison Simpson: Remember it's a marathon and sprinting a marathon.

    [00:33:06] Alison Simpson: I know from firsthand experience is virtually impossible. So great advice to both of you. Thank you for a really wonderful conversation. And I hope you have a great afternoon.

    [00:33:15] Peter Rodriguez: Thank you very much. I really appreciate the opportunity and thanks for, thanks for having me. Thanks, Bruce. Thanks, Allison.

    [00:33:22] Bruce Symbalisty: Thank you, Allison. Thank you, Peter.

    [00:33:28] Narrator: Thanks for joining us. Be sure to visit theCMA. ca and sign up for your free MyCMA account. It's a great way to stay connected and benefit from the latest marketing thought leadership, news, and industry trends.

     

    Tue, 22 Oct 2024 - 33min
  • 61 - EP29 - Building Brand Love for Lasting Consumer Connections with Justin Haberman

    Is brand love measurable magic or marketing myth? In this episode of CMA Connect, the CEO of the CMA, Alison Simpson and Elemental's VP of Client Services, Justin Haberman, dissect the power of emotional connections in business. Discover why brand love matters, how to quantify it, and the touch points for fostering lasting consumer relationships.

    00:00:00:00 - 00:00:19:22 Presenter Welcome to CMA Connect, Canada's marketing podcast, where industry experts discuss how marketers must manage the tectonic shifts that will change how brands and businesses are built for tomorrow, while also delivering on today's business needs. W  ith your host, CMA CEO, Alison Simpson.

    00:00:20:00 - 00:00:42:18 Alison Today's episode is all about brand love and building deep emotional connections between brands and the consumers in a very fast paced, results driven marketing landscape. And joining me today is Justin Haberman, who is the Vice President of Client Services at Elemental. He's also a member of our CMA Brand Council. Justin has a real passion for creating these lasting bonds between brands and their customers.

    00:00:42:20 - 00:01:03:12 Alison Justin's also worked on both the brand and the agency side of the marketing. We share that in common, and he's run and managed PnLs for leading brands in highly competitive sectors. So he really understands the importance of brands delivering ROI as well. He also brings a wealth of knowledge and insights to the table. So I'm really looking forward to diving into this very important topic with him.

    00:01:03:18 - 00:01:23:12  Alison And in the episode, we're going to dive into the concept of brand love. We're going to explore why it matters more than ever in today's marketing landscape and its role in building business. Justin will also share his thoughts on the difference between brand love and brand loyalty, and how marketers can effectively measure and quantify the impact of brand love on their business.

    00:01:23:13 - 00:01:25:20 Alison Welcome, Justin. It's great to have you with us today. 00:01:25:22 - 00:01:30:06 Justin Thank you. What a great introduction. I am very excited to talk brand love today.

    00:01:30:08 - 00:01:38:02 Alison Well, let's dive right in. I want to start by having you define brand love, and how in your mind it differs from brand loyalty.

    00:01:38:04 - 00:01:57:15 Justin So yeah, I think it's a good question because at one point in time, you know, loyalty and love were one and the same. And they both measured brand loyalty. But nowadays, as we've, you know, started innovating the way we can measure loyalty, there's been a divide where loyalty can be more of a purchase loyalty or behavioural loyalty.

    00:01:57:15 - 00:02:07:00 Justin And those are things that we can easily measure, where brand love is more of an attitudinal loyalty, and it's a deeper emotional connection to one's brand.

    00:02:07:01 - 00:02:36:03 Alison I think that's a such a great observation, when I also think about loyalty versus brand love. There are brands like Ferrari that many people have great affection for, and brand love for doesn't necessarily translate to purchase affinity. And then there are other brands where loyalty can be incentives through different loyalty programs. So that's a different kind of loyalty that probably comes with affection, but doesn't necessarily have to come with brand love.

    00:02:36:05 - 00:03:05:08 Justin Well, exactly. And, you know, there are things like you mentioned that can be incentivized. And some of those things can actually take us down the wrong path, because, you know, one may be loyal to a brand because of a promotion or convenience or even proximity, but those aren't necessarily true measurements of brand love or brand loyalty. You know, a good example that I like to give is an analogy of how I choose my barber.

    00:03:05:13 - 00:03:25:05 Justin Right? So I've been going to the same barber for the last year, and it's not necessarily because I'm extremely loyal to him. You know, if he were to move a city away, I wouldn't follow him. I go to this barber time and time again because it's easy for me. It's right down the street. And, you know, for something like a haircut, I don't want it to take up too much in my day.

    00:03:25:06 - 00:03:42:01 Justin So if you looked at the metrics that are available, engagement or purchase, you're going to see, wow, Justin's really loyal to his barber, but it, on the other end of it I'm really not. And so I think there is a false measurement that a lot of marketers lean on, which can get us into trouble.

    00:03:42:03 - 00:04:00:06 Alison I love your barber example because based on your description, which I think is a very astute one, I actually do have brand love for my stylist because I moved and now it's a,    instead of being a ten minute commute, it's a 40 minute commute. Yet they still have my business. So it's such a great example of the difference between loyalty and brand love, for sure.

    00:04:00:07 - 00:04:13:12 Alison So why do you believe that focusing on building brand love and emotional connections with consumers is the greatest opportunity for marketers, especially when we're in a world very much focused on short term results and sales numbers?

    00:04:13:14 - 00:04:34:06 Justin Right. Yeah, and it's a discussion that I have quite a bit. I mean, it's really easy when you need to answer to shareholders or managing your PnL. It's really easy to look to the short term results. You know, how do I hit my numbers this quarter? Unfortunately, you know, when you start taking that approach, it's this never-ending race to chase sales.

    00:04:34:06 - 00:04:56:13 Justin And it can be very reactionary. And so the value that comes from building a brand or focusing on brand love is it's a little bit of like a cheat code or a shortcut for driving future sales. And I really encourage marketers to take that approach and be a little bit more proactive in how they invest in that approach.

    00:04:56:14 - 00:05:17:05 Justin So, you know, another analogy or example I'll give is, you know, why do we put away money for retirement? It's really easy to spend money on the things we need or want right now, but we invest in a retirement fund to make our lives easier in the future. And that is kind of how I would encourage a lot of marketers to look at brand building efforts.

    00:05:17:06 - 00:05:41:18 Justin It's making our future lives easier, more profitable. It's going to be a lot easier to obtain new clients or new customers and retain new clients and customers. So there's a lot of value that comes from that. And on top of that, I think a lot of people these days, especially the younger generation, they really want to love a brand and they really want love to be returned back to them

    00:05:41:18 - 00:05:45:15 Justin if they're going to invest that time and effort into a brand.

    00:05:45:17 - 00:06:18:22 Alison So I've been in the CMO seat in very competitive sectors before, so I've felt the heat firsthand. I'm a big, big proponent and believer in the power of brand. I've also faced the pressure of quarterly monthly sales results and delivering results, so it's always helpful to have proven examples or any starts too, that our listeners can leverage with some of their maybe skeptical colleagues or with the executive suite to really help validate why investing in brand is so important.

    00:06:18:23 - 00:06:24:00 Alison If you have any cases or stats that you could share, that would be, I know our listeners would love to get their hands on it.

    00:06:24:02 - 00:06:53:09 Justin Yeah, of course. I mean, I've looked at a few different stats over the years. One that jumps out is close to 90% of consumers are prepared to love a brand, and they want that type of relationship with their brand. That's a huge number that speaks volumes to how we need to build and foster those types of relationships. You know, a lot of people are investing, like I mentioned before, time, money, etc. and they want to do it for brands that live up to their values, share the same beliefs.

    00:06:53:11 - 00:07:16:08 Justin So that's one that comes to mind. Another one is probably on the more you know, profitable side. When you invest in a brand, it's a lot easier to make more money. And you know, we see that with some numbers that I've come across in terms of, you know, it's a, it's seven times easier to sell to an existing customer than to try and sell to a new customer.

    00:07:16:10 - 00:07:18:11 Justin So those are just a couple that pop out.

    00:07:18:12 - 00:07:28:15 Alison So you've compared building brand love to building interpersonal relationships. And I think that's a very apt analogy. Can you elaborate a bit on the analogy and also share some of the different stages involved?

    00:07:28:17 - 00:07:49:21 Justin Yeah, I'm glad you called that out because, you know, when we talk brand building, it's one thing to get people on board with the value of it, but then it's another thing to try to explain how do you achieve it? There's a lot that goes into building brand love, and I think because of that, a lot of people are hesitant or scared to dive into it.

    00:07:49:21 - 00:08:18:04 Justin And so, like you mentioned, the the analogy to building interpersonal love is a good way to remind people how easy it can be. We're all experts at it already. It doesn't have to be this daunting task. We've all, you know, dated, we've all fallen in love with someone. Well, at least most people have. And so, you know, if you start looking into how that relationship evolves, you can translate that into some of the things you need to do as a brand.

    00:08:18:06 - 00:08:41:07 Justin Simon Sinek, marketing guru, author. He talks about how to grow love and I really liked his explanation of how to do that. He talked about how love doesn't happen overnight. It's not a moment in time, you know, you don't love your husband or wife or significant other because of one giant thing they did. It's a lot of little things that add up over time that people remember.

    00:08:41:07 - 00:09:05:18 Justin And that's what, you know, creates love in these relationships. So I really encourage a lot of brand marketers to look at their brand-building efforts in a similar way. You know, look at all the touch points and where you can build love over time and comparing it to how love grows, you know, from a personal standpoint. You start by dating someone before you get married.

    00:09:06:00 - 00:09:32:02 Justin And there's kind of three stages of love. There's the initial passion, lust phase. And this is where you're trying to, you know, create an attraction with someone. And from a brand perspective, this is where you want to get them excited about your brand. Promote trial. Get them to try it for the first time. And then you move to this intimacy stage where it's all about closeness and connectivity and building that relationship.

    00:09:32:07 - 00:10:01:15 Justin And from a brand perspective, you know, this is where you start looking at usage frequency, getting people to break routines, get them to adopt you in their everyday lives. And only once those two things have happened can you start moving to the decision or commitment phase. You know, from a personal standpoint, this is maybe the big marriage proposal, but from a brand perspective, this is when brand love really happens and when people are truly loyal to you or a product or a brand that you're promoting.

    00:10:01:17 - 00:10:21:13 Alison Building on the analogy, sadly, one in two marriages ends in divorce, and brands also can run the risk of their consumers divorcing them. So what can be done to help prevent divorce or losing that connection and that level of love from your audience and consumers, once you have it.

    00:10:21:15 - 00:10:47:06 Justin Right, it can come and go pretty quickly. And so I think to prevent any kind of divorce or disengagement, you need to remember that this is a never-ending job. Just because you won someone as a customer or just because you got married to them, it doesn't mean that the job is over. In my opinion, that's the moment where the job is just beginning, and that's where we need to focus more of our efforts, right?

    00:10:47:06 - 00:11:06:22 Justin You need to continually keep people guessing, coming out with new things, finding new ways to exchange ideas. All of that comes in really handy with keeping people connected and engaged. And I think that's why, like, social media has gained so much popularity, because it is a way to do exactly that.

    00:11:07:00 - 00:11:14:02 Alison So is brand love feasible for all products? And especially when I think about ones that are much more commoditized and mass?

    00:11:14:04 - 00:11:49:05 Justin I would say for sure. There's a reason why entire industries have been built on brand love. You know, I look at the streetwear industry and how brands like Supreme can sell a plain white t-shirt for 80, 100, multiple hundred dollars. It's because of the brand they've been able to build. You know, you also look at examples like No Frills, which is a value brand, private label brand that typically or traditionally has never had a huge emotional connection with it.

    00:11:49:06 - 00:12:10:17 Justin They've been able to do a great job. And kudos to the marketers on on that team for building a relationship with their audience. You know, they were able to look at some universal truths that existed of how people looked at private label brands and kind of spin it on their head and, and take ownership of how people like to shop and, and how people can feel proud about finding a deal.

    00:12:10:17 - 00:12:18:06 Justin And, and that's just another example of, you know, I think every product, every service, can have a brand.

    00:12:18:08 - 00:12:33:04 Alison Those are great examples, Justin. So it's obviously important for marketing to demonstrate business impact. And that can also be more challenging for brand marketing. So what are your thoughts on measuring the ROI of brand-building efforts, and what metrics or tools would you recommend?

    00:12:33:06 - 00:12:58:12 Justin It's a very, very tough one, for sure, because everyone wants to find that return on investment, and with something like brand-building, it can be more difficult, but there's places to look right. Things like attitudinal surveys are a great way to to measure it. Things like reputation quotients that go into really understanding, like the emotional quality of an experience and not just surface level things.

    00:12:58:12 - 00:13:25:07 Justin So I urge people not to get caught up in some other measurements, like engagement or retention, because like we mentioned before, it can be a little misleading. But to elaborate on on this, I also think, there's two other points that I want to mention. One is, I think it really comes down to who you're speaking to. You know, we as marketers, we're also salespeople, and we need to figure out how to talk about things in a way that resonates with our audience.

    00:13:25:07 - 00:13:47:15 Justin And so if you're talking to a CFO, your answer may be a little different than if you're talking to, you know, a marketing director. I'm just picking positions, but you really need to talk about things in a way that is going to matter to the people you're talking to. So an example of that would be if I was talking to a CFO, I was talking to someone who really cared about the numbers.

    00:13:47:17 - 00:14:10:04 Justin I would start trying to connect the dots and what my brand building efforts could do. So, you know, if I can drive future demand and I can measure that through unaided awareness, I maybe can then link it to, well, if people have a higher unaided awareness, what's their cost per acquisition? And does that start going down because they're now further down the funnel?

    00:14:10:04 - 00:14:35:11 Justin And if their cost per acquisition goes down, does that mean that they have a higher consumer lifetime value? I'm just throwing out measurements right now, but looking at different metrics along a full path can be a way to answer that for someone who's very number-driven. Whereas on the flip side, the other way to look at it is to spin it on its head and kind of remind people of why they make certain purchases.

    00:14:35:13 - 00:14:57:01 Justin You know, why have you made certain decisions? Why have you chosen one product or one brand over another? And once you start relating it back to people's personal experiences there, there is a light bulb switch moment where they realize, well, actually, brands do have an effort. And even though I may not be able to measure the way I want to measure it, it still matters.

    00:14:57:03 - 00:15:26:12 Alison There is skepticism around why brands important, and it's it's still too often thought of as, if you have money left over invest in brand, which is completely backwards thinking. But when you're working on monthly sales reports, when you're reporting to a board on a quarterly basis, showing quarterly results becomes your Kryptonite in many ways. So and if you layer on top of that, a tough economy, the brand budget can be one of the first things that gets cut.

    00:15:26:14 - 00:15:39:19 Alison So the power in your example with Supreme and No Frills was given to very easy to understand examples of how they have defended their business and profited by investing in brand.

    00:15:39:21 - 00:16:05:06 Justin I mean, a couple other brands that come to mind, with one that jumps out is something like Heinz and their their efforts in building brand and the amount of money they put behind their brand-building efforts. You know, I think of the one campaign that was Draw Ketchup. I forget if that's the exact title of the campaign, but when, you know, they went to market and asked people to draw ketchup, the first thing people drew was a Heinz bottle.

    00:16:05:08 - 00:16:33:02 Justin And that just shows the power of brand-building and how it can help elicit a deep-rooted connection with people that doesn't leave their mind. And it keeps the brand top of mind. And when the brand's top of mind, they walk into a store and the first thing they see is something that's recognizable, like a Heinz ketchup bottle, they're going to go grab that off shelf versus having to put in the time to do more research to educate themselves on the qualities of different ketchup bottles.

    00:16:33:04 - 00:16:41:08 Justin Like I mentioned before, it's just, it's a shortcut moment that makes selling much, much easier and much cheaper.

    00:16:41:10 - 00:16:58:15 Alison That's a great example. And the other Heinz campaign that I love, that was really built on a universal truth, is that behind the back-of-the-house, in a restaurant. You see people with Heinz bottles filling it with generic ketchup. And I waitressed my way through school to pay my own way. And we actually did that.

    00:16:58:20 - 00:17:15:07 Alison And then you would take out to the table, and there were customers that absolutely knew when they turned over that Heinz bottle, if the ketchup was coming out too fast, it wasn't the real thing. And they called us on it. So that's such a powerful example of why brands are important and how it does ultimately drive strong business results as well.

    00:17:15:07 - 00:17:17:22 Alison And that's also a great example of brand love.

    00:17:18:00 - 00:17:44:06 Justin Exactly. I mean, another example that comes to mind is the Pepsi versus Coke battle. And it's been going on for years and years and years. But there are some very strong, loyal Coca-Cola drinkers that wouldn't be caught dead drinking a Pepsi, but all of a sudden Pepsi launches the Pepsi Taste Challenge and they do a blind tasting and they get people to decide what is actually their preferred flavour of cola.

    00:17:44:08 - 00:17:59:19 Justin And, you know, they ended up going with Pepsi. And that's an example that shows that, you know, a loyal customer can be so strong-minded, so stuck in their way that they're not willing to try anything else. And sometimes we need to force them that there may be better options out there.

    00:17:59:21 - 00:18:17:17 Alison And my ultimate test for the Pepsi and Coke challenge is if you're out for dinner with friends and someone asks for a Coke and they say, sorry, we only have Pepsi. How often do they say, well, that's all right. And I have friends who say, no thanks and will completely change to another drink, whereas lots of friends will just say, okay, that's all right.

    00:18:17:18 - 00:18:21:14 Justin Right. Exactly what, what kind of cola drink are you?

    00:18:21:16 - 00:18:24:23 Alison I'm actually not a pop drinker. 

    00:18:25:01 - 00:18:31:06 Justin Well, I'm one of those shifting loyals where I will go wherever the availability exists.

    00:18:31:08 - 00:18:39:08 Alison But, yeah, when you meet people that are truly in love with either Coke or Pepsi, it's pretty, as marketers, it's pretty motivating to see, too.

    00:18:39:10 - 00:19:07:02 Justin Well, and that's the golden ticket, right? As a marketer, that's the the end game. That's what we're trying to achieve, is get someone to become so loyal with our brand that they're willing to, you know, abandon everything else for the brand. And, you know, when that happens and we can create that sense of loyalty. We're not only closing a sale, but we're also creating an army of ambassadors or advocates of a brand that will do a lot of our heavy lifting for us.

    00:19:07:04 - 00:19:23:10 Justin So we as marketers have an easier job because all these loyals that exist out there are selling the brand, promoting the brand, pushing it to their friends and family at zero cost to us. And that, to me is like the epitome of marketing.

    00:19:23:12 - 00:19:31:18 Alison Absolutely. And no matter how good we are as marketers, we will never have the same credibility as a friend recommending something.

    00:19:31:19 - 00:19:50:23 Justin Correct. Yeah. It's, it's funny. And that's where I think a lot of brands who've seen success on a lot of social channels like Instagram or TikTok, they've done really well where they don't try and speak to people. They try and engage people in a natural, authentic community dialog.

    00:19:51:01 - 00:20:09:23 Alison So I want to switch gears a little bit. You've got a great career, tremendous experience. So I'd love to wrap up our session today by having you share one piece of advice for our listeners that are looking to continue to evolve their careers and flourish the same way that you have.

    00:20:10:01 - 00:20:42:06 Justin One piece of advice... it would probably be the fact that we need to remember that we're communicating to humans. You know, a lot of this discussion today has been around building an emotional connection. And we as humans want that. We crave that. And we're not always rational people. We are sometimes irrational. And I think sometimes we can forget that because as marketers, we want to measure things and we talk about users or visitors, and it takes us away from the human element.

    00:20:42:07 - 00:20:55:02 Justin And I think once we remember that we're talking to humans and we ourselves as humans and we go through life and we make decisions the way we do, it allows us to make decisions that are better for our customers, our consumers.

    00:20:55:04 - 00:21:11:15 Alison There's actually some great research that validates what you're talking about from an emotional versus rational decision-making. Most human beings primarily decide based on emotion and then justify the decision through rational reasons. So it's, it's great advice on a bunch of fronts.

    00:21:11:17 - 00:21:26:13 Justin It really is important to continue to have this on our forefront as we look to plan all our marketing initiatives, you know, not forgetting how the long term can aid short term results and vice versa. It's a really, really important topic.

    00:21:26:15 - 00:21:37:17 Alison I absolutely agree, you can't draw down on brand equity if you haven't built it in the first place. So Justin, I thoroughly enjoyed our conversation today. I really appreciate you sharing your love of brand love and your experiences with us today.

    00:21:37:19 - 00:21:43:06 Justin Thank you. Yeah, really appreciate the chat.

    00:21:43:08 - 00:21:55:22 Presenter Thanks for joining us. Be sure to visit the CMA.ca and sign up for your free My CMA account. It's a great way to stay connected and benefit from the latest marketing thought leadership, news, and industry trends.

     

    Tue, 01 Oct 2024 - 22min
  • 60 - EP28 - Driving Marketing Innovation Through AI with Dave Burnett

    In this episode of CMA Connect, Alison Simpson, CMA's CEO, and Dave Burnett, CEO of AOK Marketing, delve into the rise of generative AI and its transformative effect on B2B marketing. The discussion touches on the importance of complying with company guidelines, the rapid advancement of AI tools, and how maintaining a curious mindset is essential for marketers to stay ahead in an ever-evolving industry.

    00;00;00;01 - 00;00;20;04 Presenter Welcome to CMA Connect, Canada's marketing podcast, where industry experts discuss how marketers must manage the tectonic shifts that will change how brands and businesses are built for tomorrow, while also delivering on today's business needs. With your host CMA CEO Alison Simpson.

    00;00;20;06 - 00;00;45;16 Alison In today's episode, we're diving into the fascinating world of AI and its transformative impact on B2B marketing. I'm joined today by Dave Burnett, the founder and CEO of AOK Marketing, a conversion-focused digital agency. Dave's also a board member for EO, the entrepreneur's organization. Dave definitely qualifies as an early adopter and thought leader in the AI space. He's been part of OpenAI's beta testing since 2019.

    00;00;45;18 - 00;01;14;09 Alison He also teaches two of our CMA Gen AI training courses and brings a wealth of experience and insights to the table today. Throughout, our conversation will follow Dave's personal journey with AI from his days as an early tester with OpenAI to now using AI tools in his everyday work. He'll share the story of his a-ha moment when ChatGPT, a conversational AI tool, dramatically impacted his business and how he chose to embrace the technology and adapt to strategies in response.

    00;01;14;11 - 00;01;45;19 Alison As we explore the unique use cases and opportunities for AI in the B2B space, Dave is going to provide some great examples of how companies of different sizes are building AI-powered solutions. We'll also discuss the caution and hesitation often present at the executive level. So for marketers who may be a bit intimidated or reluctant to start experimenting with AI, Dave also offers practical advice on getting started on treating AI models like highly-educated new employees, and helpful tips for how to interact with these tools to get the best results.

    00;01;45;22 - 00;01;48;23 Alison Welcome, Dave. I'm thrilled to have you joining me today.

    00;01;48;25 - 00;01;53;16 Dave Thanks so much Alison, and I really appreciate the invite. And yeah, I'm excited about our conversation today.

    00;01;53;23 - 00;02;05;24 Alison Me too. So let's start by having you walk us through your personal journey from AI, from being an early beta tester with OpenAI to now using Gen AI tools in your everyday work.

    00;02;05;26 - 00;02;27;06 Dave So I actually found out about OpenAI a long time ago, back when Elon Musk was founding it. And I thought, hey, this is a really interesting thing. So I signed up to be an early beta tester. And just for clarity, I am not in any way technical. I'm a marketer. I'm not one of those technical marketers, really, who gets deep down into programming.

    00;02;27;08 - 00;02;47;19 Dave So this was just something that was an interest of mine back in the day. And so OpenAI came out. I got accepted into the beta program. Obviously they had low bar, a low bar back at that point. And when I got accepted in, it was really exciting for me. And they had already launched a couple of language models, so ChatGPT clawed a bunch of these,

    00;02;47;19 - 00;03;08;17 Dave others are all large language models. And when people are talking about AI, they can talk about a and a bunch of different ways. But the most common and prevalent way that people are thinking about it today is as a large language model. So the first language model they came out with was called Ada, Ada. And then the second one they came out was called Babbage.

    00;03;08;17 - 00;03;24;09 Dave And the third one that came out with was called Curie. So you'll notice the A, B, C. And then they came out with DaVinci. And as I was going through all these, I mean, they were terrible. You know, they couldn't do anything. You're in there playing around and you know, it just okay, this doesn't do what I want it to do.

    00;03;24;09 - 00;03;47;19 Dave And all of a sudden, OpenAI launched ChatGPT, and it was exponentially better than anything else that we've seen in the world. So what I realized in that in that timeline was this is a tool I can use. But the problem was everybody else realized it was a tool they could use, too. And so one of the things that we do as a digital agency is content.

    00;03;47;21 - 00;04;09;09 Dave And all of a sudden, so it was released the end of November, ChatGPT. By the end of January, we lost all of our content clients. So we lost, you know, hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of revenue, because of this tool. So that was my a-ha moment. The less polite word is the holy crap, you know.

    00;04;09;10 - 00;04;28;22 Dave Oh my goodness moment. And as a result of that, I had to learn. I had to adapt. So I spent two weeks in February, right after it had been released, three months after it had been ChatGPT had been released just trying to get up fully up to speed because I was, you know, dabbling, I was dipping my toe in.

    00;04;28;24 - 00;04;49;10 Dave And then I realized, all right, I'm now caught up. You know, I literally spent two weeks, I'm now caught up. And then in early March, of course, they released, GPT four. So it was a whole other exponential leap forward. But I had a foundation. What I realized is that everybody's on a bit of a journey when it comes to AI.

    00;04;49;12 - 00;05;10;25 Dave So the stages of the AI adoption framework are fear, skepticism, holy crap, investigation, adoption and mastery. And everybody kind of goes through those, I've found. If you can see where your people or yourself are on this curve, you know what the next logical step is. And I love talking to the skeptics who are like, it's not that good.

    00;05;10;29 - 00;05;24;29 Dave It's not going to get there. I'm like, okay, well, you just haven't had your holy shit moment yet. You know, it's something's going to have to do that for you. And once you do, then we'll have another conversation that'll be a different conversation. So hopefully that helps a little bit with the background of where I got to back then.

    00;05;25;04 - 00;05;45;27 Alison It's it's a great story. And there is there's negative moments and there's positive. Wow, I finally figured out why everyone's so excited about this. You obviously had the more negative side and I can't imagine literally overnight a significant portion of your business vanishing. So I definitely want to talk a bit more about that. The other piece that I want to talk about,

    00;05;46;04 - 00;06;08;15 Alison so in your journey, you very much were an early adopter. You weren't technical. So that gives all of the marketers listening who don't come from a technical background, comfort that you don't need to be technical. Even in the very early days of the beta testing you were doing with OpenAI. The piece you're not giving yourself credit for that I think is mission critical for everyone's journey is curiosity.

    00;06;08;17 - 00;06;33;02 Alison Because if you weren't curious enough and open-minded enough to raise your hand and join the beta in 2019 for something that really none of us knew, understood, and certainly didn't at that point understand the potential of. So I think that's a really important part of the journey, where you're probably being a bit too much of a humble Canadian by not giving yourself the credit for that open-mindedness and curiosity and for everyone listening.

    00;06;33;02 - 00;06;43;12 Alison I think those are such important elements, not just for being successful with new tools like Men AI, but for a successful career in marketing.

    00;06;43;14 - 00;07;11;19 Dave No, I agree. Curiosity is a massive thing. I've always been curious. I'm always interested in what's new, what's coming, what's next? How can I do this? Because, to completely date myself. I graduated university before Google was invented. So the fact that I now own a digital conversion focused digital marketing agency, that's SEO. And, you know, like everything digital, it required a learning curve.

    00;07;11;22 - 00;07;38;16 Dave You know, I mean, I remember Google launching. I remember, you know, when they bought what's now AdWords or Google Ads. I remember all those different things. And so seeing these things and realizing that I have to keep on top of them and doing my best to keep on top of these things is just what you have to do in order to be able to survive, because I don't know what's going to come out next week, next month, next year, and so it's all it's all exciting and to be honest, keeps it interesting.

    00;07;38;21 - 00;07;51;09 Alison Absolutely agree. So after you did hit that brick wall that Get AI created in your content business, how did you pivot and where does your business stand now with leveraging Gen AI.

    00;07;51;11 - 00;08;12;11 Dave So I use it every day. And so it's a tool. I look at it as say for example, you were a you were an author or writer. You would have Word open or Google Docs. Whatever you use as a marketer, you might have Canva open or Illustrator or whatever you might use if you're a on the design side or Figma or whatever tool that it is that you use in your, in your work.

    00;08;12;13 - 00;08;43;23 Dave And so I've incorporated it into my work and it's just made me, me personally, exponentially more efficient. I can do the same amount of work in an hour that I used to do in an entire day, maybe multiple days. You know, a lot of my work, it tends to be on the, strategy side. It tends to be on the, you know, proposals and talking to people and understanding and taking giant amounts of information and condensing them down into information that people can understand.

    00;08;43;23 - 00;09;12;19 Dave Because parts of SEO, parts of Google Ads, parts of conversion rate optimization can be very technical. It's really being able to say, look, you know, if you for content generation, for example, do stuff and then talk about the great stuff you've done, that's one element of it. But where AI comes into it is AI is great for doing foundational content, baseline content, you know, for example, in a promotional products business, what is embroidery?

    00;09;12;23 - 00;09;34;28 Dave What is screen printing? You know, what is a t shirt made of? Like all those every business has its foundational content that you need. So how I'm using it today, I mentioned that I've got multiple tabs open, but it also is great for, you know, consolidating all those things and getting getting a good read on what's going on with those.

    00;09;35;01 - 00;09;59;07 Dave So just to put it in a better example, if, for example, a news piece comes out around Google and for example, Google had an algorithm leak and their algorithm leak was highly technical, it was literally the way you could program into Google how how the search engine works. So I took that information. Not being a technical guy took all that information.

    00;09;59;07 - 00;10;23;28 Dave I knew enough how to create a text document from it, put that into Google. And, you know, and I tried to figure out what it was, didn't know. So I then took that text document and put it into ChatGPT and said, what does this mean from an SEO perspective? And it spit out these five things. You know, technically you need to do this, local SEO, you need to do this, like all these different metrics and all these different instructions.

    00;10;24;04 - 00;10;43;22 Dave And then I was able to dig down and dig down and dig down and then take that and actually apply it in my business and apply it for our clients. So it really is a great tool to be able to take massive amounts of information and make it, you know, dumb it down for me, just quite honestly. So yeah, it's a fun way to use it.

    00;10;43;22 - 00;11;07;28 Alison We talk so much around the creative uses of ChatGPT, and certainly it's a tool that way as well. But you broadened it to a more, it's also very powerful from a strategic perspective, from a planning perspective in running a business. It's also an incredible efficiency play. So beyond the marketing capabilities and ways that ChatGPT can enable us in running a business and in managing a team, it can also be incredibly powerful.

    00;11;07;28 - 00;11;11;08 Alison So I appreciate you sharing some of those examples for sure.

    00;11;11;10 - 00;11;28;28 Dave Yeah. And it's one of those things where you have a choice to make once you start to use these tools, you know, ChatGPT being primary and one of them, you are going to get so much more efficient. You're gonna have a choice, you know, do I spend my time doing eight times more stuff? You know, if I can do in one hour what used to take me eight hours?

    00;11;29;00 - 00;11;43;27 Dave Or do I do one hour's worth of work and go to Myrtle Beach or something? You know, I, you know, whatever, whatever it may be, you know, so it's it's really a choice you're going to have to make. And I think those people who embrace this as something that says, okay, this is a this is kind of jet fuel.

    00;11;44;00 - 00;12;02;06 Dave I can go from, you know, just a biplane or, you know, a paper airplane to being on a jet. And this is how fast I can move. This is how much information I can do. This is how, how, how, how, how I can outcompete. It's really a tool that you should use, for sure.

    00;12;02;08 - 00;12;16;18 Alison Now, Dave, in the B2B space, I'd love you to share some unique use cases and opportunities that you're seeing for leveraging Gen AI, and also to share if it varies, based on the company size or the industry that, the brands and marketers are part of.

    00;12;16;21 - 00;12;41;27 Dave Absolutely. I mean, it all depends. So starting at the enterprise level, there are often rules that individuals have that they have to adhere to. You know, I know in some organizations you can't access anything on your local server or from your, your intranet or from your IP address that ends in dot AI. There are a lot of considerations you have to take into account the security side of things.

    00;12;41;27 - 00;12;59;07 Dave You have to take into account what data you're putting into, and you know how you can adopt. So as a as a marketer who's looking to early adopter, you know, adopt these types of things, you are going to have to figure out what works for your organization. That's first and foremost, because you do not want to compromise any data.

    00;12;59;07 - 00;13;15;10 Dave You do not want to compromise any information. You want to make sure that you are following the rules that are set, and the rules are there for a reason. Now, if you're in a small or medium sized business, well, it's kind of the wild, wild West, right? You can just go for it and do whatever you want. So ignore everything I just said.

    00;13;15;10 - 00;13;35;21 Dave No, I'm just kidding. You still need to adhere to those things. So from a small to medium size, what I'm finding is people are tend to be plugging in to some of these public models. So they're, they're paying for paid subscriptions or they're doing things where they kind of have their own information. And then you know, separating it out.

    00;13;35;21 - 00;13;58;17 Dave So they've got their own information, but are kind of reaching out to these public models to then, you know, power it basically. So they're trying to create these walled gardens that aren't quite as walled off, I don't know, chain link fence instead of walls? So as a result of that they they're able to use the, as the models get better and better and they're able to have their own data referencing.

    00;13;58;20 - 00;14;27;09 Dave So and then the small businesses, I mean, they're just they're just accessing, giving stuff away and doing all that kind of stuff. So when I say giving stuff away, what I mean is a lot of these models are trained off of your data. So if you upload a client proposal into ChatGPT without putting any of the safeties on or anything like that, technically that information becomes part of the training model for ChatGPT to train others so other people could utilize that.

    00;14;27;09 - 00;14;57;00 Dave And I, I mean, do you have a lot to worry about? Probably not, if you're, but I you got to be careful. Talk to your lawyer. I just, you know I know this is going to go a broadcast if you're going to share any information, but at the same time, you know, you can, just understand that if you make the data anonymous and just take out the client's name and just be - a digital marketing agency is creating a proposal for a landscaping company.

    00;14;57;02 - 00;15;22;00 Dave And this landscaping company is, you know, needs X, Y, and Z, zed, x, y, and zed things. And, you know, it's just it's really something that's that you can use. Just don't be so specific. So I'm seeing people use these really varies based on their organization size and then what they're trying to do with it. I mean, I've been in meetings where people are still head in the sand.

    00;15;22;00 - 00;15;40;11 Dave This is really something that I'm very afraid of. You know, they're on that that spectrum in terms of the, the framework. And I think they're, we're all going to potentially move forward through the framework. But, you know, depending on where they are and who they work for, I, I'm seeing a lot of different things with how they're using it.

    00;15;40;13 - 00;16;04;19 Alison And if, if they're in a highly regulated industry or as you call it, a large organization where there are those limitations, and I would still encourage marketers to start experimenting with Gen AI in their personal life, on their personal computers, because it's not going to get easier to to learn. It's not going to get any less intimidating. So the longer that they're waiting, the harder it will be to catch up.

    00;16;04;19 - 00;16;15;17 Alison And it's also a missed opportunity, like when you call out that you can now in an hour, do something, enough work that formerly took you a day, like, we all want to benefit from that as well.

    00;16;15;19 - 00;16;50;00 Dave Absolutely. And I think it's it's really important to for people to experiment, as you were saying, no matter what organization size that they're in, because the more you play with these tools, the the better you'll get. So from my perspective, it makes the most sense to think about these AI tools as a newly-graduated, newly-minted MBA student who is highly, highly knowledgeable, super, super highly knowledgeable, and yet they know nothing about you and they know nothing about what you want from them.

    00;16;50;00 - 00;17;14;04 Dave So just like a new hire, new employee, you know, they're excited. Well, I mean, the machine's not necessarily excited, but they're excited to to learn and to do and to give you the right answer. But they need to know some context. So it's really important to start off with, all right, when you're when you're entering any information into this and we'll just focus on the large language models like ChatGPT.

    00;17;14;07 - 00;17;41;03 Dave Just, you know, you are a, or whatever you want that particular model to be. So for example, you are a proposal writer and and then that frames the the rest of the input and what you're going to give instructions as that. So depending on how you're using the tool you really got to frame it first. So you are a, and then tell it what it is and then go and say, okay, here's some research, here's some information.

    00;17;41;05 - 00;18;01;29 Dave And if you really want to kind of go next-level with it, you can say, here is the type of an answer that I really like. Write me an answer like that. So for example, if you were using it to write a resume, I don't know, say you wanted to switch jobs, you could put an ad, you can upload a resume and say like, here's all, here's all my LinkedIn profile, here's all the information for my LinkedIn.

    00;18;01;29 - 00;18;23;24 Dave Here's all the amazing stuff I've done. Here's the people have referred me,  here are the people of, you know, endorsed me, whatever. Here's all the articles I've written. Here is a resume. Take all this information and write a resume about me. And by the way, you also should put in, and do not make anything up, because that helps limit the creativity of the model.

    00;18;23;27 - 00;18;48;20 Dave So sometimes we touch briefly on it, but it does hallucinate. And so hallucination I view as creativity. So it gets creative sometimes, a little too much. So you just do not make anything up. And then of course once it see it, it produces, it writes you that resume, double check it. Because any of these tools are only going to get you 80% of the way there.

    00;18;48;22 - 00;19;08;23 Dave That's the other key thing that I think people miss is they just take what they got, put it into an email, or put it into a proposal or put it into something else. The tool will only get you 80% of the way there. And just like an intern really, or no, or a new hire, they are going to do some great work with how they're trained, but they're not going to get it exactly as you want.

    00;19;08;23 - 00;19;24;27 Dave It may not be in your voice, your tone, whatever it may be, and then you need to go in there, actually read it, actually take a look at it, correct it, and then use it if you're going to use it. But it will get you it will get you 80 or 90% of the way there pretty much every time.

    00;19;24;27 - 00;19;25;20 Dave So yeah.

    00;19;25;20 - 00;19;50;03 Alison Such great advice. And I really love your intern and new employee analogy. Because by investing a bit more time upfront, by helping coach them and support them along the way, they do get better and the outputs become even more valuable. And that is so true of ChatGPT. And if you have people that are listening that are a little skeptical or intimidated or don't want to try it in their first experiences, they try and say, well, this is crap.

    00;19;50;06 - 00;20;01;18 Alison It's easy to then say, so I don't need to bother, instead of saying, I'm part of the reason, that's crap. This is part of the learning I need to go through to really get the value and the benefit out of the tool and to really understand it.

    00;20;01;21 - 00;20;23;08 Dave Yeah, it's it's it's important. And I think, you know, there's references for example, if you're like, how big is New York? Right. What are you, what are you really asking? Are you looking for how big is it in square kilometres? Are you looking for how many people live in New York City proper, or are you looking for, you know, any any of these other things?

    00;20;23;11 - 00;20;42;11 Dave You need to be very specific. So if you said how many people live in the greater New York City area, and then you could refine that to, you know, how many people live in Manhattan and then double check those answers because it might have made it up. So use Google as well to kind of reference things.

    00;20;42;11 - 00;20;55;06 Dave And, and you know, more and more AI is coming into the search engine world, but, yeah, you definitely want to double check and fact check, whatever it is that you find just using that example.

    00;20;55;08 - 00;21;01;11 Alison That's a great example. And adding the simple caveat "and don't make anything up" to your promise is incredibly powerful.

    00;21;01;14 - 00;21;34;23 Dave Yeah. Well it's still makes stuff up though. That's like, it's it kind of follows instructions but not 100%. And you can also do things like, forget everything previously input or forget everything above. So you can do those types of things as well. And those tend to help, you know, kind of reset. But I always just start another chat and then I'll just start another chat just so I can I can kind of reset based on things, because in my experience, they the tools themselves tend to go off track after a while.

    00;21;34;25 - 00;21;52;28 Dave And so you kind of need to reset and you'll start to notice, be like, that quality of that answer wasn't as good as it was a while back, so you can actually copy a chunk of answers you liked, put it in a new chat, and that seems to work well. But again, it'll just come with playing, playing with these tools.

    00;21;52;28 - 00;22;14;06 Dave But there are other tools for marketers out there. I mean, there are tools that will write you songs, you know, from, from start to finish. There are tools that will develop creative content for you in terms of your your imagery. There's tools that will do a whole bunch of different things for you. So there are videos, there's amazing different things out there that you can do.

    00;22;14;09 - 00;22;34;23 Alison Absolutely. And I love that. One of the CMA training sessions that you do for us, I love how you make it very relevant to the learners that attend, and have them leverage all of the different tools to actually write a marketing plan. So putting it into practice in a way that any marketer can understand and benefit from, it's a really great, teaching technique that you have.

    00;22;34;23 - 00;22;36;03 Alison So thank you for that too.

    00;22;36;05 - 00;22;43;29 Dave I'm happy to share for sure. What might be fun is to create a song, you know, because this is a podcast.

    00;22;44;03 - 00;22;48;23 Alison I love it. We're going to create a CMA Connect podcast theme song on the spot.

    00;22;48;25 - 00;23;11;22 Dave Okay. So this is Suno, this is a fun tool. This is something that, I'm not sure how many of the listeners would have, will have explored before and basically what this is, is a library of created songs and it's it's amazing. So what I'm going to do is I'm just going to hit create. What type of music do you want the theme song to be?

    00;23;11;24 - 00;23;22;06 Alison It definitely needs to be energetic. It needs to be, feel more future-focused, trying to think of specific genres that would deliver on that.

    00;23;22;08 - 00;23;45;04 Dave I mean, we could start off with a pop song. What do you think about doing a pop song? Sure. An energetic pop song about the CMA podcasts. We have two different pop songs here. So we have Tune into the CMA, Tune into CMA. So I'll start with this one first.

    00;23;45;06 - 00;23;57;07 AI Song New stories every week. Fresh voices with a tweak. Tune in. Don't miss the beat. CMA. Bringing heat.

    00;23;57;09 - 00;24;20;07 Dave So that's that's the first one. So the interesting thing is what it does is it writes the copy, the words of the song and then creates different beats. So I'm going to play the second one now and it's got the exact same lyrics, but it'll be a little bit different.

    00;24;20;09 - 00;24;35;18 AI Song New stories every week. Fresh voices with a tweak. Tune in. Don't miss the beat. CMA. Bringing heat. Laughs and tears all day long. Conversations where we belong. Grab your headphones, come along...

    00;24;35;18 - 00;24;37;08 Alison So which one do you prefer?

    00;24;38;22 - 00;24;40;29 Dave I like this one better, to be honest.

    00;24;41;01 - 00;24;54;07 Alison Right now the lyrics are fairly generic and given the prompt we've served it, that makes perfect sense. If we were to elaborate more on what we were asking for, am I right in assuming that the lyrics will become more relevant and stronger as well?

    00;24;54;10 - 00;25;01;01 Dave Absolutely. The better you prompt, the better and more relevant it'll be. So here's gritty, intense, hard rap.

    00;25;01;04 - 00;25;14;19 AI Song Tune in, CMA dropping' bombs on the regular. Facts so sharp, sharper than the predator. Mic in hand, splitting' truth like a prophet. Expose the lies, real talk, no profit...

    Alison I kinda like this one too.

    00;25;14;21 - 00;25;26;13 Dave When you think about it from a marketer's perspective, how many hours would this have taken? How many, how much investment in time, effort, people? It's just, it would be crazy.

    00;25;26;15 - 00;25;36;02 Alison So we're just getting started, right? When you think about how much the tools have evolved, how many new tools have emerged on the scene, and it's changing daily?

    00;25;36;05 - 00;25;51;20 Dave Absolutely. It's it's, and it's not just like we talk about the large language models because that's what everybody tends to focus on. But there are all these other tools that are just absolutely mind blowing. So yeah, it's it's a fun journey to be on like, this is this is exciting and fun.

    00;25;51;22 - 00;26;01;29 Alison So as marketers are embracing Gen AI, what skills are becoming more critical and what should marketers keep in mind as they're navigating this rapidly evolving landscape?

    00;26;02;02 - 00;26;24;01 Dave Well, you know, really, as much as we were talking about these tools, people are still important. You know, people matter. You still have to have the soft skills to be able to communicate with people and understand. So all those fundamentals that you learned aren't going away, but marketers who use it are going to have a significant advantage to those who don't.

    00;26;24;01 - 00;26;44;22 Dave And so, for example, if you said to me, you know what Dave, come up with a creative concept for, for, you know, an ad for the CMA podcast, and I could come up with a complete marketing plan, a complete copywriting. I could write you your landing pages, your copy for all of your, communications, your Twitter, or your X posts, or your LinkedIn posts.

    00;26;44;29 - 00;27;05;22 Dave I could generate images for it. I could create a song for it, and I could do all that, probably before lunch. If you're going up against me, you've got to be skilled in this, right? And I am by no means the best at this. I am a learning person who is just trying to use this as much as possible, but you got to know what's there to be able to do it.

    00;27;05;22 - 00;27;31;02 Dave So it's it's important for you to, to use these tools and, and be open and curious and be willing to fail. You know, you need to really, you need to to really not get great results and then accept the fact that, okay, that result was bad, but it wasn't because of the machine, it was because I'm not good enough yet at prompting the machine, at entering the information, at giving the resources.

    00;27;31;04 - 00;28;00;09 Dave So I always look at it as, how can I get better? Because what I found is, in my experience, the better I get, amazingly, the better the machine seems to get. You know, it's just it's just it's amazing how how advanced it gets, you know, so you can use these tools to help you prepare for meetings. So for example, if you download a transcript of this podcast, you could then say, okay, give me the summary points that Dave said I should watch out about security concerns.

    00;28;00;16 - 00;28;26;20 Dave What are enterprise companies doing about those security concerns? How can I, as a small, medium-sized business marketer use these tools? And what should I tell my CEO or CMO, CTO or whatever? What should I tell the C-suite about this tool? And how can I then persuade them to use these tools. So you can even like brainstorm. You can you can just bounce ideas off this off the machine.

    00;28;26;22 - 00;28;48;25 Dave And it's really interesting to see the results that you can get. And, you know, I mean, like any intern, they'll have great ideas. And you'll use 1 or 2 of them, but you'll still get two more ideas than you didn't have before. So it's it's really, really important. So you, as you said earlier, being curious, it's 90% of the battle in this case.

    00;28;48;25 - 00;28;56;18 Dave So and then, don't just know about it, do it. Actually use the tools. That's that's the most important thing.

    00;28;56;23 - 00;29;19;12 Alison Well they also highlighted, and a willingness to fail. Like this is not going to be perfect. This is not going to be like inserted into no matter how good your prompts are, make the request and then just serve up the finished product. It still does need human engagement. It needs human review. Humans will make any output from the tools even stronger, and you have to be willing to fail.

    00;29;19;15 - 00;29;38;11 Dave Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. And if you're yeah. If you're not, if you're not at the highest level of your profession, if you're a junior marketer or something, you can you can use this to up up-skill, to do what the people above are doing. Ask, you know, ask the people above you for feedback on whatever you're giving. And then take that feedback.

    00;29;38;11 - 00;29;59;04 Dave Incorporate it into whatever you're doing, your workflow, your processes. Because I've found AI works really well, like it's a machine. So the more structured data like, like lists you can put in, the more information that kind of has a hierarchy like, you know, headings, subheadings, all that kind of stuff, it will react well to things that are well-structured.

    00;29;59;06 - 00;30;17;16 Dave If you're just kind of, write me a pirate shanty, then it comes up with all kinds of stuff, right? But if you were like, okay, write it. And you know, with these, this many verses with this type of information about these things, make sure you hit on this, this and this. It just gets better and better. People aren't going away.

    00;30;17;16 - 00;30;27;24 Dave This is just going to make people better, smarter, faster, more skilled. And you know, it's, you go from riding a tricycle to driving a Ferrari. It's, you go a lot faster.

    00;30;27;28 - 00;30;53;00 Alison Absolutely. So, Dave, this has been a wonderful conversation. You've given us such great advice and very practical ways that we can start engaging with the tools if we're already engaging, which I hope most of our listeners are, how to build on the early learning that we each have. Now, separate from Gen AI, you have a amazing career. You've built businesses, you've been entrepreneurial.

    00;30;53;03 - 00;31;05;29 Alison So to close off our discussion, I'd love to have you share one piece of advice for marketers who are looking to stay ahead in their careers and what they need to do to continue to evolve with the industry.

    00;31;06;01 - 00;31;30;23 Dave So the biggest learning I've had, in that side of things, has really come down to how I approach things. And really it's kind of a framework that I've taken to adopt, which is, you know, that doesn't work for me, changed to how do I. So let me give you an example. Twitter, X, is a tool that I never really understood.

    00;31;31;00 - 00;31;52;01 Dave You know, it's the noise problem. There's so much stuff there. It's all about politics whatever. And so my thought was, it doesn't work for me. It's not going to ever work for me. Instead, I had to change my mind to how do I use this tool to accomplish what I want? So I went in, I deleted everybody I was following, and I just, so this is a kind of a dual purpose.

    00;31;52;01 - 00;32;13;03 Dave I just started following people who are the thought leaders in AI. So Twitter is, now my feed is now all the latest developments in AI, all the amazing things that are happening, changing it to a "how do I". Because whenever I start to think that way, I realize that the problem's with me, not necessarily the platform, not necessarily the tool.

    00;32;13;06 - 00;32;22;16 Dave So how do I learn how to do this thing better? And and then that's just really the best piece of advice I can give. So hopefully that's helpful.

    00;32;22;16 - 00;32;26;26 Alison I love that reframing. It's great professional advice. It's also great personal advice. Thank you.

    00;32;26;26 - 00;32;38;26 Dave Absolutely. No, you're welcome. Thank you very much for having me. This has been a lot of fun. And it's it's been really you know, I'm grateful for everything the CMA does. You guys are amazing. So I'm happy to be able to contribute a little bit.

    00;32;38;29 - 00;32;51;17 Alison You're  one of our many amazing members. And I really appreciate all that you give back to the community as well, because we're only as strong as the the level of engaged members that we have. And you definitely are high on that list. So, Dave, thank you for everything.

    00;32;51;19 - 00;32;57;12 Dave Thank you for having me. I appreciate it.

    00;32;57;14 - 00;33;10;02 Presenter Thanks for joining us. Be sure to visit the CMA.ca and sign up for your free My CMA account. It's a great way to stay connected and benefit from the latest marketing thought leadership, news, and industry trends.

    Tue, 17 Sep 2024 - 33min
  • 59 - EP27 - Integrating AI in Non-Profit Marketing with Allen Davidov and Kelly Hardy

    In this episode of CMA Connect, Alison Simpson, CEO of the CMA, sits down with two members of the CMA's Not-For-Profit Council, Allen Davidov, Senior Vice President, Sales Practice & Marketing Leader, Environics Analytics and Kelly Hardy, Vice President, Marketing & Communications, YMCA Canada. They explore the unique opportunities and challenges of leveraging AI in non-profit marketing, discuss strategies for preparing for the AI-driven future, and share valuable advice for marketers looking to embrace this transformative technology.

    00:00:00:00 - 00:00:22:08 Announcer Welcome to CMA Connect Canada's marketing podcast, where industry experts discuss how marketers must manage the tectonic shift that will change how brands and businesses are built for tomorrow, while also delivering on today's business meetings with your host, KMA CEO Alison Simpson.

    00:00:22:10 - 00:00:46:01 Alison  In today's episode, we're diving into the world of charities and not for profit organizations to discuss how they can leverage the transformative potential of generative AI as the marketing landscape continues to rapidly evolve. Charities and not for profits, can often find themselves facing some pretty unique challenges when it comes to adopting cutting edge technologies like Gen I. With limited resources and a focus on mission driven work.

    00:00:46:03 - 00:01:08:07 Alison  How can these organizations harness the power of AI to amplify their impact and drive success? To help us navigate this meaty topic, I'm joined by two members of the CMAs not for profit council, Kelly Harding, as the vice president, marketing communications for YMCA Canada, and Allen Davidoff as senior vice president, sales practice and marketing leader, and Varonis analytics.

    00:01:08:09 - 00:01:40:14 Alison  Both Kelly and Allen bring deep marketing and leadership expertise. They've also held senior roles in nonprofits, and their first hand experience makes them perfectly suited to discuss how charities and not for profits can explore and implement new technologies like not. They'll share some of the ways they're doing this, along with some valuable lessons learned throughout our conversation. Today, we'll explore the various ways in which Gen AI can help nonprofits scale their marketing efforts everything from automating mundane tasks to enhancing content creation and volunteer work.

    00:01:40:16 - 00:01:51:16 Alison  We'll also discuss the importance of upskilling teams, developing AI policies, and addressing concerns around authenticity and transparency. Welcome, Kelly and Allen. It's really great to have you both here today.

    00:01:51:18 - 00:01:52:21 Allen Thank you for having me.

    00:01:52:22 - 00:01:53:21 Kelly Thank you.

    00:01:53:23 - 00:02:13:14 Alison  Now, I'd like to kick things off with the question. And, Kelly, I'll get you to take the lead on this one. As marketers with experience and not for profits. What role do you see Gen AI playing now? What have been your early experiences in leveraging it? I'd also like to hear what advice you would give to those who might be a little bit reluctant to start using AI.

    00:02:13:16 - 00:02:45:14 Kelly So I think the generative AI is going to have a monumental shift on the marketing and communications function in an organization, as well as us as marketers ourselves. Just how quickly this technology has developed and what it's capable of now. I think particularly in charities and nonprofits, you're really going to be able to extend the capacity of your teams in a way that our resources probably would never allow us to, unless you have expertise right at your fingertips.

    00:02:45:16 - 00:03:05:16 Kelly It can be a copywriter. It can be a brainstorm or a planner. It can fulfill almost or many of the roles that a creative agency might have just to get you started. It's not at the point where it's replacing any human jobs right now, but it's really going to, I think, enhance and be a companion to us as marketers.

    00:03:05:18 - 00:03:30:13 Kelly As you start to dive into the world because it's new and it's also you're adding your information into these large language models is really important to understand your organizational policies around the use of AI and protecting your private, confidential, proprietary business information. I like to use AI, as I said, as my editor. So sometimes my sentence structure clarity isn't there.

    00:03:30:14 - 00:04:07:03 Kelly So I still write stuff. Well, say can you just review this for grammar, clarity, sentence structure or make this shorter? I hadn't done anything in generative AI before December, and then I took a course through the Canadian Marketing Association that was led by Karla Congson. That really demystified what generative AI is about. So I think that as many of us are going to be at the early stages of AI, I'd encourage a great place to start is just take a course that helps you understand what it is, the role of it, the limitations, the cautions and the Canadian Marketing Association offer some great courses on that as well.

    00:04:07:03 - 00:04:36:14 Kelly So ones like AI for nonprofits and Hands on Efficiency and Impact training, that's led by Emily Baillie, and that's suited for nonprofit professionals of all levels of experience who are looking to expand their skill set and gain insight into how I can be used in nonprofit marketing. Karla, who I mentioned is the CEO and founder of Open Gravity, has been a great resource for me, and she worked with the CMA, available On Demand ten video based module on generative AI for marketers.

    00:04:36:14 - 00:04:57:00 Kelly So that's a really great course because it's not just about generative AI, but how you can leverage it in your role as a marketer. They also have AI and the Future of Work in marketing and executive overview, which is also led by Karla. And that's tailored more for executive marketers to really understand the complexities and opportunities for AI driven marketing.

    00:04:57:02 - 00:05:19:02 Kelly And you can also engage with Unlock the Power of AI and how I can make you a better marketer. That's left by Dave Burnett and that's tailored for marketing for practitioners with 2 to 5 years of experience looking to expand their skill set and embrace the future of AI enhanced marketing. So I think really the key message is this is going to be a skill upgrade that all of us is going to have to make.

    00:05:19:04 - 00:05:31:18 Kelly whether or not you like the idea of AI is going to become part of what we do now. If you haven't sort learned the time is now and the CMA offers great resources to do that.

    00:05:31:20 - 00:05:51:12 Alison  Kelly, thanks so much. It's really great for me to hear that the training through the CMA that you took was a key part of your journey, and I really appreciate the shadow. I also know that our listeners are going to definitely find a compelling the idea of gen AI helping you scale you and your team so you can be even more productive and manage very complex and workloads.

    00:05:51:12 - 00:06:00:03 Alison  And the ability to multitask with fewer hours in a week is going to be a compelling benefit for all of us. And I'd love to turn it over to you to answer the question as well.

    00:06:00:05 - 00:06:25:06 Allen Thank you. And when I look at I just see it as a marketer, I see that as another tool in my toolbox. So looking at from from what my organization is trying to do or trying to achieve, it's looking at what are the different tools at my disposal. And we live in this great age where we have so much rich data and great technology that allows us to actually do things on our own, sometimes without overspending in a lot of different areas.

    00:06:25:06 - 00:06:58:08 Allen I kind of look at it as an opportunity to look at the goals that my team has and what I'm trying to achieve, whether it's a campaign, whether it's creative, whether it's summarizing things, putting out more content and seeing where it can kind of help. So I know Kelly spoke to some of the mundane tasks, but looking at and evaluating your own campaigns and looking at the different videos you've put together, there's great uses of AI just to summarize things for you, to help you just bring things down and allow you to really expedite some tasks really quickly to get things moving.

    00:06:58:10 - 00:07:23:04 Allen So I see there's great uses of it. No differently than, you know, obviously shameless plug from the data analytics side. It's a great tool on my toolbox that any marketer can have. And look at how you build your own personas and connect with them. AI in the same fashion gives you opportunities to look at how do you upskill and how do you also extend sort of the use or expansion of your team and the volunteers that you use?

    00:07:23:06 - 00:07:43:15 Allen So I think AI's definitely an opportunity, but I would ask everyone to kind of start, I think Kelly spoke about some great CMA courses and great resources, but just look at it from the perspective of what am I trying to accomplish? And what can I help me? So getting started and kind of dig into some of that is kind of starting from that standpoint.

    00:07:43:17 - 00:08:07:08 Alison  For anyone that is worried about AI replacing their jobs, it's certainly not going to do that. And when we were talking earlier, we all talked about it's not about gen AI replacing our jobs. It's about marketers who are digging in and experimenting and learning and getting upskilled in joining AI that ultimately will replace our jobs. If we decide to, that we can opt out of this new technology.

    00:08:07:13 - 00:08:25:16 Alison  And you've both given so many benefits of why we should be open to experimenting and exploring, and that can really help remove some of the mundane tasks that are part of anyone's job, make us more scalable and also help stress test some of our thinking and play the important role of editors. So really great examples to kick off the session.

    00:08:25:18 - 00:08:42:06 Alison  Now, with the not for profit and charitable experience that you both bring to the table, I'd love to hear a bit about the unique opportunities that you see for not for profits and charities to leverage. Gen. AI, particularly when they often have smaller budgets and smaller teams.

    00:08:42:08 - 00:09:03:09 Kelly I think that, as we've discussed, AI can be a series of AI powered expertise and experts at your fingertips. So and I think a lot of times, and especially charities where you have limited resources, you don't have all the people in your team that, you know, bigger corporations may have. And I think even bigger corporations never have all the skills and expertise they want.

    00:09:03:11 - 00:09:28:10 Kelly So generative AI is going to give us opportunities to bring those skills in-house, at a cost that would never be attainable if you actually had to hire each of those or outsource consultants to help you with that. I think that what you'll have to do is figure out what type of expertise you want and how to work with, you know, the AI model that you're going to work with to leverage that properly.

    00:09:28:10 - 00:09:52:10 Kelly But right now it can help with copywriting. It can help with data analysis. So if, you know, sometimes we'll just do surveys to try to understand how people are thinking about things or reacting to things. The quickness, which means they can analyze verbatim comments. And we know how expensive quality surveys can be because of that human effort required to analyze the verbatim comments.

    00:09:52:10 - 00:10:11:22 Kelly Well, now that's accessible to most of us to be able to do that. So I think that's what's really exciting is not about especially at the YMCA right now. It's not about replacing their jobs, but helping us. And it's not about making us work. Longer hours is about making better use of the hours that we have and just listening to expertise.

    00:10:11:22 - 00:10:14:22 Kelly We need to have access to before.

    00:10:15:00 - 00:10:22:06 Alison  Making better use of the hours we have, is such a great way to sum it up. Kelly, thank you so much. Now I'll I'd love you to share your thoughts.

    00:10:22:08 - 00:10:46:11 Allen Yeah. So I think added to what sort of Kelly has said there's an opportunity to upskill yourself. And I know this has been mentioned in terms of what does my team need to sort of farm and what's the best plan to get them there, and where do they get the resources? So using AI as a search and a planning tool is a great resource for a lot of charities, especially medium and small ones that don't have a lot of opportunities.

    00:10:46:13 - 00:11:13:19 Allen Or this, the background in terms of H.R. And why not? So just looking at what are the new marketing skills that are out there, can I help you search those function like those skill sets, and put a plan together to prompt you to go and read this article or, you know, register for this class. So there's a great opportunity to use it as a development tool for a lot of different marketing teams on not for profits as well as, you know, summarizing and using it as a creative resource.

    00:11:13:19 - 00:11:34:08 Allen So if you have some ideas and I know we all, you know, get behind a whiteboard and throw ideas together and brainstorm with our team. So it's another opportunity to use the tool to say, you know, here's some ideas. Put them all together, search what's out there, and then come back with, you know, more refined ideas that you then as a team can take a little bit further.

    00:11:34:10 - 00:11:52:10 Allen So again, it's a great searching tool. And a great development tool that a lot of groups, a lot of marketing teams can utilize. And I've seen it done and we are using it on Environics in terms of from those standpoints as well, it can keep you on task and it can really help you search for different things that you're looking for and put it all together.

    00:11:52:12 - 00:12:19:14 Alison  That's great. Now you both have given our listeners lots of reasons to want to experiment and try. And for those that have already embraced gen AI to continue their learning and experimentation, we all know that not for profits typically are not early adopters of new technologies. So for our listeners that are coming from the charitable and not for profit space, what would you recommend they do to prepare for the significant changes that gen AI is bringing?

    00:12:19:20 - 00:12:22:11 Alison  And I want to why don't you kick off this answer?

    00:12:22:13 - 00:12:47:23 Allen I would say that a lot of that are in the not for profit space, are not too far behind. there was a recent stats can report that came out that said 1 in 10 companies in Canada, corporate companies or all companies in Canada intend to actually implement AI in this next year. And in terms of Canada and the global sort of environment, where 29th out of 31 that's sort of implemented currently.

    00:12:48:01 - 00:13:05:19 Allen So the not for profit space, I would say, is not too far behind. Everybody's trying to get a sense of what is it, how can it be used, and how could this benefit my organization? How can this benefit me as a marketer in my team? So what I would say is there's it's never too late to jump in.

    00:13:05:20 - 00:13:23:19 Allen I think it's great to spend some time and find some time, as we all do, as as marketing leaders, to kind of see what's out there and talk to people and look at use cases and again, bring it back to what my team or my organization trying to achieve. And how could this help benefit us and expedite things?

    00:13:23:23 - 00:13:44:10 Allen So from mundane tasks all the way to upskilling, I think not for profits, there are different use cases that they can kind of fitted into, but it's never too late to try anything, right? Just like when I think about social media and, and when that came on board, a lot of people were trying it and some people were more hesitant and eventually got on board.

    00:13:44:10 - 00:14:05:02 Allen But it was never too late. It's just a matter of what's the right fit for your organization and what's the right use case for your organization. And also from a policy perspective, like being more aware of things that are important from privacy and whatnot. So, I think it's never too late, I guess. And at the same time, it's just you got to jump in to try.

    00:14:05:02 - 00:14:07:14 Allen You got to play and figure it out.

    00:14:07:16 - 00:14:22:23 Alison  And thinking of it more as play instead of this overwhelming, intimidating new thing is a great mindset to bring into it as well. Now, Kelly, being in the not for profit space with your current role would be great to hear what else you would add to Alan's great advice.

    00:14:23:01 - 00:14:45:17 Kelly Yes, and I think as charities, we often don't have the resources to take risks in the early stages of technology where we know there is that refinement. And, you know, the version one of something, if you look at, you know, ChatGPT when it was released, not that there's a lot of different between how it was implemented, but some of the technologies, we just can't use our resources to take risks on them.

    00:14:45:19 - 00:15:04:09 Kelly With AI, we know that we're going to be adopting it don't always be expert as any time new technology comes. So if you look at the evolution of digital marketing, we don't need to have experts, in-house SEO experts, digital marketing, meta experts. We don't need to have them in-house because we know that there will be experts there to help us.

    00:15:04:09 - 00:15:26:09 Kelly So I always want to ease everybody's mind to know the experts and people who do this for a living. We'll be able to help us understand the use cases for our charities and nonprofits, and who knows where this is going to go in the future, because we're at a certain place in time right now. But maybe our service delivery is going to be able to be delivered by AI in the future.

    00:15:26:09 - 00:15:54:00 Kelly We're not there yet, but I think one of the things that charities and nonprofits should be thinking of in the adoption of this technology is understanding where it's going, and it's really hard to keep on top of it sometimes because things change so fast. So one thing we've done at YMCA Canada, because there are risks and there's a lot of sometimes what's going to happen when these AI's, if they ever get that independent general intelligence where they can actually make decisions independently of humans.

    00:15:54:00 - 00:16:24:17 Kelly And that's scary scenario. We are nowhere near that right now, but understanding the potential pitfalls of that technology. So sometimes if you don't have that expertise in-house, that might be a skill you look to add to your board of directors. We've also encouraged learning of our staff to keep up with this. So we actually at Y Canada had a book club where we read a book called The Coming Wave by Mustafa Suleyman, and he really outlines and it's not going to be necessary.

    00:16:24:18 - 00:16:49:04 Kelly It's a technical book that's not necessarily about charities and nonprofits, but just more on the state of AI and the threats to the world and how you can mitigate them. So having discussions around things like that, how are those threats and risks applicable to your organizations? Do you have policies? These policies, whatever you put in place today, you probably going to have to rethink it six months from now as the technology and new capabilities become available.

    00:16:49:08 - 00:17:09:07 Kelly So I think that's one thing, is just learning about the risks and uses of it. You don't necessarily have to be doing them, but having that general sense of the impact AI is going to have on your organization, and if you don't have that capacity in-house right now, there's people out there that can help us with that.

    00:17:09:09 - 00:17:26:07 Alison  Kelly, thanks so much. That's great value to our listeners with all of the great resources. And I love the book club idea as well. Now, Alan, do you have any additional advice for any marketers who might be listening today? And they're still a little bit overwhelmed or panicked or just unsure of where to begin exploring gen AI?

    00:17:26:08 - 00:17:51:13 Allen Right. So I think Kelly's given some great advice and some great resources. But just as an executive, I think as a marketing leader, you kind of just have to jump right in and start playing and understanding the tool. I e we have a committee that actually put together that kind of looks at different use cases and talks to the organization and comes to different town halls with ideas and showcases it and allows the teams then to kind of take it away and kind of play with it a little bit.

    00:17:51:15 - 00:18:20:19 Allen So I think we all kind of have to jump right in and and try it out and see what the limitations are and, and see how it could fit for your organization. And I think without doing that yourself, it's hard for you to direct your team to actually different use cases as well. So I think as leaders, it's upon us to try these things, to read up on them and get familiar with them in order to kind of help drive that through an organization or your own team.

    00:18:20:21 - 00:18:40:05 Allen So I think the easiest thing is dive right in, test it yourself, see how it works, try it for use case. If you know you join a podcast like we have today and just get the show notes and see how we could summarize it for you. So simple. Something simple as a task like that can start to showcase what are those opportunities for you?

    00:18:40:09 - 00:19:02:23 Allen If you have to write something and, you know, put some bullets together on, here's a blog post that I'm thinking about. You know, ask gen AI if you can add some additional thoughts or what what the gaps are in your thinking. See what it comes back with. So keep on just testing little ideas and little things with it and see how we can help you continuously progress and just read a lot of information on it.

    00:19:02:23 - 00:19:30:01 Allen I spend a lot of time on podcasts and reading different articles on it, and listening to different people outside of just courses, just to see how different organizations sort of have adopted it or used it in different instances to say, can I use that little nugget and bring it back to my organization? Can I test it myself? So I would just say, start with jumping in yourself, get familiar with it, and then just get your team playing with it as well and coming back with ideas to the table every single time.

    00:19:30:01 - 00:19:44:22 Allen So whether you put a committee together and that's, you know, an organization committee or you do it with your own team and just bring back nuances every week and ideas and nuggets, I think that's the right way to start. And that's the best way to kind of learn yourself.

    00:19:45:00 - 00:20:10:05 Alison  Many thanks. And with all the great resources that you and Kelly are both sharing, what we'll do to make it easy for our listeners is add links to the different resources that have been highlighted and the names of the books as well. So now there are lots of amazing benefits and lots of compelling reasons why marketers and not for profits, and charities and marketers in any industry really need to embrace and understand and start working with Genii.

    00:20:10:07 - 00:20:27:09 Alison  It's far from perfect. There are always risks and watch out for any new technology. So what are some of the key lessons learned that both of you have experienced or watch out for, not for profits that you would give as they start to begin to leverage on Kelly?

    00:20:27:13 - 00:20:48:18 Kelly I think for, biggest thing right now is understanding what happens to the information that you're putting in to the tool that you're using. There's some ways that those are private and that that information isn't shared into a larger database of information, but some of them aren't. It becomes part of that learning and accessible to other people eventually who would be using it.

    00:20:48:18 - 00:21:12:06 Kelly So I think that's the number one thing. And if you're not sure there's, you know, resources on the web that you can find, I have found that the paid version of tools are often smarter than the non-paid version. So that's one thing that we've been we're at our office where we use Microsoft 365 platforms of the Copilot integrations.

    00:21:12:06 - 00:21:31:14 Kelly In the paid version, we've gotten subscriptions for all our staff because that actually does offer a different level of privacy. My my general rule of thumb is if I wouldn't put it on our public website, I'm not going to put it into AI because I just assume anything going into AI is going to be public information at some point in time.

    00:21:31:16 - 00:22:02:23 Kelly Then I think also understanding just the impact of AI generated content on how your brand is represented. So, you know, are you at a place where you're comfortable using AI generated images, which as charities sometimes loses that authenticity that's so important to the work that we do and the storytelling that we do. But sometimes, though, depending on the needs that your organization addresses, it may not be appropriate to take photos of that in AI.

    00:22:02:23 - 00:22:24:09 Kelly May actually be able to help you tell your story in a different way. So I think really just understanding, the comfort level with AI generated content, I think eventually us as a society will become more accepting of it. I think right now there's some thoughts like, oh, that's not a center to us. We shouldn't be using it in our public facing materials.

    00:22:24:11 - 00:22:35:13 Alison  that's such a smart rule of thumb that you've given us as well. If you wouldn't put it on your public website, then you probably shouldn't be feeding it into ChatGPT either. So, Alan, what would you add?

    00:22:35:15 - 00:22:54:01 Allen I would definitely highlights, and reinforce the privacy aspect. So putting things in there that are private and, you know, could be harmful, I think is definitely something that you should stay away from and put some policies around it and give it some thought. I think the other added things is it's not always correct. It's not always right.

    00:22:54:03 - 00:23:16:21 Allen The answers that you get back are not always perfect. So it's that's something that we all got. So we used to, you know, putting in a search function in Google, you'll get answers and you think it's always right. But it actually is not always correct. So being very careful about what you put in there and what you get back and evaluating what you get back and having that human element and and reinforcement I think is necessary for us.

    00:23:16:21 - 00:23:34:04 Allen But it's coming to it from that mindset that it's an ad, it's a feature that you can help move you along in a process. But it's not always perfect. So it's, you know, mathematic skills might be great, but some of it's formulas it will offer how it speaks about certain things are off or it's English might be a little bit off.

    00:23:34:06 - 00:24:01:17 Allen So having coming into it with that mindset is it's not perfect and you really got to be aware of those things. So Kelly talked about being authentic. So understanding that it might not capture your voice in the perfect way and then not have perfect grammar is something to definitely be aware of as a marketer, as a writer, as someone who's putting something together, a blog post or looking at a campaign and, and copy, you always should just be aware of that.

    00:24:01:17 - 00:24:08:11 Allen So again, it's a great tool to help you get started and move you along. But it's not the final solution to something.

    00:24:08:13 - 00:24:29:10 Alison  That's so true, but only is it not perfect. Sometimes it's out and out wrong. We can't get lazy about it. We absolutely need to take the time and apply the due diligence to make sure that it's accurate and factual, and also reflective of your personal tone and values and voice and your brand's, values and voice as well.

    00:24:29:12 - 00:24:47:21 Allen It is always learning, and the beauty of AI, and we've been talking about this. It's always learning as you put more things in there as others do as well. So it gets to a better spot. But you're absolutely right. The the fact that it that you need that sort of human element always overseeing it kind of speaks to it'll never replace us.

    00:24:47:21 - 00:24:53:01 Allen It needs us to keep on. And it should be seen as a tool, not a replacement.

    00:24:53:03 - 00:25:18:08 Alison  Absolutely. Now, we've talked a lot about gen AI, and it's certainly, however, the biggest, most dominant trend in our profession today. But it's not the only trend. So our profession is absolutely continuing to evolve at warp speed. And we all have very, very busy day jobs. So I'd love you both to share, some tips for what you do to stay current with the latest trends.

    00:25:18:10 - 00:25:38:15 Kelly Kelly Jones As you said, the whole industry evolves rapidly, and a lot of that has to do with the marketing technology that we use and where I think as a charity, where you might actually see the first impact of AI if you're not using it personally, is that the tools and systems that you use are now starting to integrate AI into their platforms and solutions.

    00:25:38:15 - 00:26:08:06 Kelly So we've seen that with Adobe. We see that with things like Canva, which I know probably a lot of charities are using. So what I try to do is understand what they're offering now, through AI enhancements with their platform. And AI is the hot topic right now. So there are plenty of webinars that are offered by the vendors that you're working with that I'd encourage you to actually attend those because those are the tools that you're using, and they're just there to help you use their tools better, more efficient, and do more with them.

    00:26:08:07 - 00:26:11:17 Alison  Thanks, Kelly. That's terrific advice. Ellen, what would you add?

    00:26:11:19 - 00:26:32:05 Allen I would say that just listening to different podcasts and marketers and what's out there when going to networking events and talking to people, listening and sort of asking questions about what they're doing and how, what they're using. I use those moments and sort of reading up, you know, in different tech sections, at different newspapers about what's coming up in different campaigns.

    00:26:32:10 - 00:26:53:10 Allen I use those opportunities and those sort of tools to help me upskill and sort of just stay on top of different things. So there's great podcasts such as this one to talk about the different tools and tech that's coming up in different practices. There is great articles and blogs that are being posted on LinkedIn and other sources that will allow marketers just to stay what's on top.

    00:26:53:10 - 00:27:13:11 Allen And then Kelly, throughout the great idea and the webinar, I think there's so many great webinars being done by different vendors about all these different things. And that's something all those things that I know that I spend time reviewing, whether I wake up and I go for a run or I'm sitting on a trainer on a bike or whatever I'm doing, I think on the weekends, just reading up on all these things.

    00:27:13:11 - 00:27:30:08 Allen I think as a marketer, it's a great opportunity for us to sort of just stay on top of these trends. But there's a lot of great people talking about a lot of great things. So we're just asking more questions and being more curious, I think is really behind it all. And how do we stay current and up to date?

    00:27:30:10 - 00:27:51:18 Alison  I have a similar approach to you all on, a lot of podcasts accompany me on my runs and help distract me from the actual sweating and the hard work run. So multitasking on a different level. So you both have outstanding careers. Such an amazing experience, and I'd love to close off our discussion today by having each of you share one piece of advice for.

    00:27:51:18 - 00:28:01:23 Alison  Or it can be for not for profit markers. It can just be for any marketers who are looking to embrace gen AI and drive success in their organizations.

    00:28:02:01 - 00:28:24:05 Kelly So I think I'd like to give my advice to the people who haven't started yet, because I think there's this scariness aspect to it, like in this panel, like, oh, everybody's uses it. I'm not, I assure you, you're not the only one who has not started using it with these technologies is you've actually been designed in a different way than a lot of technologies, in that they're designed to be used based on just natural conversational language.

    00:28:24:05 - 00:28:47:02 Kelly So there's actually not a big learning curve to get started with it. And as you basically have conversations with the machine, they'll start to ask you questions to help refine the information that you're getting out of it. So I think the one advice is if you haven't started, just pick a tool chat. The free version is a great one, and you don't even have to be a work related thing.

    00:28:47:02 - 00:29:09:14 Kelly Ask it to help you plan a seven day vacation to Europe. And if you want to hit this end. And I think what really brought me into I was once you start to see the quality of the information and answers in the language, that starts to come back, because it's nothing like anything we've ever used before, and you'll see that it's really not a difficult technology to adopt.

    00:29:09:14 - 00:29:33:18 Kelly When you hear that the next version of this is out it, it doesn't impact how you input into it. It's getting smarter on how to respond to what we're inputting into it. So as we've said, is to just play. And then as you get a little more comfortable, pick a task. So maybe you do want to generate some copy for a social media post, but the more specific you can be in your ask, the better.

    00:29:33:18 - 00:29:47:21 Kelly So like the tone of voice, the length, what action you might want to drive, who it's for, the more information you can give it around the specific outputs you're looking for, the better results you're going to get. But just start playing in there.

    00:29:47:23 - 00:30:05:19 Alison  I love the start playing and by the way, plan a wonderful vacation in here if there's a very aspirational element to that. So we have any listeners that are still a little bit reluctant. You've given them, a great added incentive to get in and start playing. So, Allen, how would you wrap things up?

    00:30:05:21 - 00:30:31:02 Allen Stay curious. I think as marketers, we're probably entering or I've heard we're entering into the golden age of marketing, where we have all this rich data, where we have all this great technology and all these things at our disposal that are not overly expensive, that are giving us the opportunity to do things better, to reach our customers, to reach our donors, to reach people that we didn't think we could or understand them as well as we thought.

    00:30:31:04 - 00:30:53:02 Allen But really, it all starts with curiosity. And as a marketer, being curious about how you can do things better, how you can improve things can really lead to testing new things. Like, I like getting into data, like getting into different platforms that can deliver a better measurable result and measuring results. So I think it's just a matter of staying curious.

    00:30:53:02 - 00:31:11:02 Allen You know, we've talked about play a lot over this podcast and just playing a little bit with the tools to understand how are they relevant to your organization? What are some of the pitfalls? What are the some of the do's and don'ts? And start small and expand a little bit. And then also talk to your network about how they are using this tool.

    00:31:11:02 - 00:31:28:14 Allen I think we all as markers have great networks. We're all part of councils and committees. Like, I love my time on the NFP Committee on the CMA and some others that different boards and committees that I'm on. But I'm always asking questions of others, whether it's Kelly or other members, to say, how are you using this tool?

    00:31:28:14 - 00:31:54:15 Allen Have you seen this tool? And that's part of the great part about joining the council on the CMA is like, you have that opportunity to discuss and also share and learn. So there's a lot of great content out there. And I think as a marketer, I think I would just say be curious about it, read it and just try to go seek it every day to improve the work that you're doing, improve the team that you're working on, and sort of grow it and gather and kind of move forward and and get to your goals.

    00:31:54:15 - 00:32:07:07 Allen Because we all have lofty goals, our revenue goals or our donor goals or, you know, fundraising goals. So it's just there's a lot of great tools out there. And as a marketer, I think we have the opportunity to do some really great things.

    00:32:07:09 - 00:32:30:02 Alison  That is very well said. Curiosity for any marketer at any stage in our career is absolutely a mission critical skill. I also like you're talking about we're entering the golden age of marketing. This is a profession that I love. I know both of you love it as well. It is not an easy profession. It's demanding, it's challenging, it's constantly evolving, and there's so much possibility in it.

    00:32:30:02 - 00:32:56:15 Alison  And I truly do believe that with things like Gen, AI and just all of the change we're currently going through, it really is setting us up for a truly golden age of marketing. And I appreciate you ending the this wonderful conversation on that note, Alan. I know you're both incredibly busy, and I really appreciate the time you've taken today to share your experiences and your wisdom and great advice with all of our listeners.

    00:32:56:17 - 00:32:57:07 Allen Thanks for hanging.

    00:32:57:11 - 00:33:02:11 Kelly Out. Thanks for having us.

    00:33:02:13 - 00:33:15:03 Announcer Thanks for joining us. Be sure to visit the The CMA.ca and sign up for your free my CMA account. It's a great way to stay connected and benefit from the latest marketing, thought leadership, news, and industry trends.

     

    References:

      Financial Post: https://financialpost.com/technology/can-ai-solve-canada-productivity-crisis 

      Stats Can Report on Business Conditions: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/240226/dq240226a-eng.htm 

      Ipsos Report: https://www.ipsos.com/en-ca/news-polls/Canadians-Least-Likely-AI-Make-Lives-Better 

     

    Tue, 03 Sep 2024 - 33min
Mostrar más episodios